Last updated on · ⓘ How we make our floor plans

This is a compact modern single-story house with a clean rectangular plan and a very efficient layout. It is simple, sharp, and easy to live in. No maze. No wasted theatrics.

The facade follows a crisp contemporary language with boxy massing and a recessed front porch. Smooth white wall finishes form the main volume, while warm horizontal wood siding highlights the entry and upper accent block. Black-framed windows add contrast and definition. The roof is a low-slope flat system concealed behind parapet edges, giving the home a neat, disciplined silhouette.
These floor plan drafts are available for download as printable PDF files. They are useful for review, markups, and builder discussions. Print one out, point at the kitchen island, and look immediately more organized.
- Total area: 825 sq. ft.
- Bedrooms: 1
- Bathrooms: 1
- Floors: 1
Main Floor

The main floor measures about 30′ by 30′ overall. The layout is split neatly into two zones. Open living space sits on the right. Private and service rooms line the left. It is a smart little plan with very few wasted moves.
The front covered patio leads directly into the living room at the front right. Behind it, the kitchen occupies the rear right corner with an L-shaped counter, a sink wall, and a center island. A pantry sits near the middle for quick access and quiet snack storage.
On the left side, the bedroom is placed at the front. The bathroom sits in the center and includes a tub, toilet, and vanity. The utility room is at the rear left, giving space for laundry and household functions. A coat closet near the upper entry adds a practical extra.
- Living Room: Front-right, connected to the patio entry and open to the kitchen
- Kitchen: Rear-right, with L-shaped counters and an island
- Pantry: Central storage nook beside the kitchen
- Bedroom: Front-left private room
- Bathroom: Center-left full bath with tub, toilet, and vanity
- Utility: Rear-left service room
- Coat Closet: Small closet near the upper entry
- Covered Patio: Front-right sheltered outdoor area
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We have more facade options of this design:
Urbane Bronze Siding

Switched to Urbane Bronze, the siding now dresses the cubic facade like a tailored suit, sharpening edges and deepening the flat-roof shadow lines.
The entry portal reads bolder, its recess moodier, while the black-framed door and windows blend into the field instead of hollering. The warm vertical wood at the porch pops harder by contrast—cinnamon on dark mocha.
This richer skin recalibrates the composition: the coping bands look sleeker, the upper horizontal wood volume steps forward, and the slim sconces become crisp punctuation.
The low-sheen surface turns the planes monolithic by day and velvet-dramatic by dusk. Same footprint, new attitude—compact modernism now brewed espresso-strong.
Deep Red Siding

The siding shifted to a deep red, saturating the entry recess and the upper box with a bold accent. Set against the crisp white stucco bands and charcoal trim, the color sharpens the massing and adds depth.
Horizontal planks now emphasize the low, modern rooflines like underlines with attitude.
The black-framed glass door and sidelights pop harder, the red acting as a precise picture frame. Cool materials—the stacked-stone planter and pale pavers—fade politely, letting the porch become the visual anchor without yelling.
Even the slim wall sconces look crisper, their light skimming the red grain and casting tidy, graphic shadows.
Forest Green Color Siding

The siding shifted to a forest green, and the facade instantly feels more grounded and composed. Warm cedar cladding at the porch and upper volume now pops like a spotlight, making the entry the star.
Slim eaves and the projecting canopy read crisper, almost like tasteful eyeliner for the flat-roof geometry.
That deeper green amplifies the horizontal lap lines, sharpening the stacked volumes and giving the stone planter a deliberate, architectural seat.
Black window frames and sconces stand out cleanly, while the pale steps, white gravel, and lawn-strip pavers glow brighter against the darker wall. Same modern bones, now with forest swagger.
Deep Blue Color Siding

The siding switches to a deep, inky blue, trading the former neutral for drama. The boxy massing tightens, the porch recess reads deeper, and the flat overhang gets a crisp underline.
Black-framed windows and slim sconces snap into focus—like bold commas in a short sentence. Navy tuxedo, cedar lapels.
That hue punch makes the vertical cedar at the entry and the rooftop screen glow warmly instead of whispering. Light steps and pale pavers look brighter by contrast, sharpening every edge.
The stacked-stone planter cools down, syncing with the modern grid of openings. Small footprint, upgraded swagger.
Black Color Siding

Changed first: the siding is now inky black, turning the left volume into a sleek monolith. That deeper tone turbocharges the contrast with the warm horizontal cedar at the entry and roof parapet, while the white canopy reads like a bold underline.
The black makes the slim window frames visually melt into the cladding, so the glass feels bigger and the vertical lines cleaner.
Stone planter, pale pavers, and the gridded door pop brighter against the dark plane—same geometry, new mood. Think modern cottage in a tuxedo, and it remembered the bow tie.
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