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A compact, single-story mid-century modern residence offering 1,337 square feet of efficiently arranged living space. Clean lines, bold materials, and a layout that punches well above its weight class.

The facade is a confident nod to mid-century modern architecture at its most polished. A dramatic natural stone accent wall flanks the entrance, anchoring a warm hardwood double door that commands immediate attention. The roofline is low-pitched and wide, with a deep dark-toned overhang that casts sharp, deliberate shadows across the elevation. Smooth stucco cladding in a crisp off-white finish wraps the structure, contrasting handsomely with the stone and dark steel detailing. Expansive glazing panels flood the interior with natural light while reinforcing that signature horizontal MCM openness. A covered outdoor living alcove extends the roofline to one side, supported by slender steel posts — effortlessly cool, as one would expect.
These floor plans are available as draft documents, ready for download and printing as high-quality PDFs. Whether you’re sharing with a contractor, a client, or simply pinning them to a wall for dramatic effect, the printable format makes the process straightforward and professional.
- Total Area: 1,337 ft²
- Bedrooms: 2
- Bathrooms: 1
- Floors: 1
- Garage
Main Floor — 1,337 ft²

Everything happens on one level here. The main floor spans the full 45′ × 36′ footprint and organizes all living, sleeping, utility, and garage functions in a clear, logical arrangement. No stairs to negotiate. No mysteries. Just a well-thought-out single-story plan.
The Hall is the undisputed centerpiece of the layout at a generous 364 ft² — essentially the circulatory heart of the home, connecting every major zone. It’s large enough to breathe, which is a quality worth celebrating in a house this size.
The Living Room clocks in at 171 ft² and sits toward the right side of the plan, adjacent to the Kitchen at 152 ft². Together, they form a natural social and functional pairing along the front of the home.
Bedroom 1 is the primary retreat at 191 ft² — comfortably proportioned and positioned toward the rear right corner for privacy. Bedroom 2 at 97 ft² sits on the left side, equally tucked away from the main living areas. Serviceable and sensible.
The Bathroom at 54 ft² serves both bedrooms, paired conveniently with the Utility room at 54 ft² — a tidy symmetry that keeps the back-left corner of the plan quietly functional.
The Mudroom at 28 ft² sits near the rear entry, doing exactly what a mudroom should: keeping the chaos of daily comings and goings from migrating further into the home. The Garage rounds things out at 180 ft², positioned on the left side with direct interior access — practical, private, and properly sized for a single vehicle with room to spare.
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We have more facade options of this design:
Bronze and Lavender Siding

Bronze and lavender now run the show: bronze siding takes the main wall planes while lavender sweeps the eaves, rafter tails, and entry bay trim. The midcentury gable grins wider in lavender, and the stone chimney suddenly looks like it was born to glow against bronze—desert sunset meets grape soda, but somehow elegant.
This palette sharpens the clerestory line, making the black-framed glass read crisper, and it pulls the grid-front door forward like a spotlight. Bronze vertical boards elongate the facade, lavender beams trace the roof rhythm, and the pergola pops as a dark counterpoint—cool, composed, and just cheeky enough to wave at the cacti.
Grey and Deep Blue Siding

Swapped to a grey cladding with deep-blue framing, the facade now reads crisper and cooler. The deep blue traces the rafters, fascia, and pergola, outlining the low-slung gables like bold eyeliner, while the grey vertical boards calm the planes so the geometry does the talking.
That palette flip amplifies contrasts: the tawny stone chimney warms up against the blues, the gridded wood entry pops like a headline, and the clerestory band feels sleeker as the dark trims bracket the glass. Shadows bite harder under the blue beams, giving the mid‑century roofline a sharper swagger—less sun-bleached, more desert night chic.
Mint Green and Yellow Siding

The facade now wears mint green and yellow siding, trading the former single-tone skin for a gelato-meets-sunburst combo. Mint wraps the left wing, while lemon boards animate the patio wall and sync with the square-punched double doors; the stone chimney and charcoal beams keep the color party politely in line.
This palette sharpens the midcentury geometry: the low gable and clerestory read bolder, soffits catch a mint echo, and the black pergola pops crisply against the yellow plane. Even the glass at the entry feels livelier, reflections zinging off the candy-color cladding—desert modernism with extra zest.
Red and White Color Siding

The siding now swings to a bold red-and-white duet. Red wraps the left volume; white brightens the glazed entry wing. The split heightens the massing, pushing the stone chimney forward as the anchor.
Dark fascia and exposed beams punch harder against the white, and the gable reads razor-crisp. Even the square-punched wood door looks sunnier, like it got a standing ovation.
This color reset tightens the rhythm. White vertical boards echo the clerestory mullions, while the red plane brackets the pergola and frames the glass—midcentury grin, freshly lipsticked.
Light siding lifts the roofline visually; the red grounds the asymmetry with swagger. Same breezy retro bones, upgraded attitude, zero time machine required.
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