Single Story, 2 Beds, 1 Baths, 900 sq. ft., 30×30 Modern Bungalow Floor Plans: Fern Hollow Bungalow

Last updated on May 21, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

1/13
Fern Hollow Bungalow Design

order floor plans

This is a compact single-story cottage plan with 900 sq ft of interior living area. The layout is direct, tidy, and pleasantly practical. No wasted maze-like corridors here.

The facade has a clean modern cabin character. Dark vertical board-and-batten siding gives the house a crisp, grounded look. Black-framed divided windows add sharp contrast, while the natural wood entry surround softens the elevation with warmth. A low dark shingle roof with broad eaves keeps the profile simple and calm. The tall black chimney adds a confident little exclamation mark.

  • Total area: 900 sq ft
  • Bedrooms: 2
  • Bathrooms: 1
  • Floors: 1

Main Floor

2/13
Main Floor

The main floor measures 30 ft by 30 ft and contains 900 sq ft. The plan is arranged with open daily living on one side and private rooms on the other. Simple. Efficient. Very hard to argue with.

The living room sits at the front and forms the largest interior space at 234 sq ft. It connects naturally to the dining area and kitchen, creating a relaxed shared zone. The dining room, at 92 sq ft, bridges the living room and kitchen without making meals feel like a commute.

The kitchen provides 100 sq ft and is supported by a 16 sq ft pantry. That pantry is small but mighty. The nearby 15 sq ft coat closet serves the entryway, keeping shoes, jackets, and daily clutter from staging a tiny rebellion.

A central 60 sq ft hall organizes access to the bedrooms, bathroom, utility room, and shared living spaces. The storage is smartly placed: closets sit near the bedrooms, the pantry sits near the kitchen, and the coat closet sits by the entry. Everything has a place. Even the suspiciously large collection of tote bags.

The bedroom wing includes Bedroom 1 at 109 sq ft and Bedroom 2 at 96 sq ft. Closet 1 provides 13 sq ft, while Closet 2 provides 12 sq ft. The bathroom is 73 sq ft and is positioned close to both bedrooms. The utility room adds 60 sq ft, giving the home a strong practical backbone.

The patio is listed at 270 sq ft and extends the usable living experience beyond the interior footprint.

  • Living Room: 234 sq ft
  • Dining: 92 sq ft
  • Kitchen: 100 sq ft
  • Pantry: 16 sq ft
  • Entryway: 26 sq ft
  • Coat Closet: 15 sq ft
  • Hall: 60 sq ft
  • Bedroom 1: 109 sq ft
  • Bedroom 2: 96 sq ft
  • Closet 1: 13 sq ft
  • Closet 2: 12 sq ft
  • Bathroom: 73 sq ft
  • Utility: 60 sq ft
  • Patio: 270 sq ft

We have more facade options of this design:

Urbane Bronze Siding

3/13
House Siding Color Urbane Bronze

The big change is the siding color: Urbane Bronze now wraps the facade in a deep, smoky tone that makes the little bungalow look sharper and moodier in the best way. It gives the vertical board-and-batten cladding a richer rhythm, lets the black window frames disappear into the composition like cool sunglasses, and makes the natural wood front door pop right at center stage.

With the new bronze skin, the simple front elevation feels more tailored and cabin-chic, while the low metal roof and tall chimney read even cleaner against it. The broad windows look crisper, the trim feels more intentional, and the whole facade gains that “quiet confidence” thing—like it knows it looks good without shouting from the deck.

Dusty Blue Siding

4/13
House Siding Color Dusty blue

The big change is the dusty blue siding, and it completely shifts the facade’s mood. On the vertical board-and-batten exterior, that muted blue feels calm, crisp, and just a little fancy without trying too hard.

It gives the small bungalow a cleaner, more tailored face, especially under the dark roofline.

That new siding color also makes the rest of the front elevation pop: the natural wood entry surround looks warmer, and the black-framed windows read sharper and bolder. With the centered glass door, slim transom, and two large front windows, the facade stays simple and symmetrical, but the dusty blue gives it more charm—like the house finally found its good jacket.

Deep Navy Siding

5/13
House Siding Color Deep navy

With the siding changed to deep navy, the facade feels sharper, moodier, and a bit more dressed up for the woods. The vertical cladding now gives the compact bungalow a taller, cleaner look, while the bright white trim around the windows, door, and roofline snaps against it like it means business.

That darker skin also makes the black-framed front windows and slim chimney feel more intentional, almost stealthy in a fun way. Even the warm wood-toned entry door glows more vividly now, so the whole front elevation reads as crisp, modern cabin charm with just a tiny dash of drama.

Deep Red Siding

6/13
House Siding Color Deep Red

The big change is the siding, now finished in a deep red that gives the facade a richer, moodier cabin character. It makes the simple rectangular front feel more deliberate and graphic, almost like the house put on its best flannel.

That deeper color sharpens the contrast with the black window frames, the pale wood front door surround, and the muted shingle roof. The vertical siding lines read more clearly now, and even the chimney pops with extra swagger against the darker skin.

Sage Green Siding

7/13
House Siding Color Sage green

The big change is the sage green siding, and it absolutely shifts the facade into a softer, woodsy mood. Applied across the vertical board-and-batten cladding, the color makes the simple rectangular form feel calmer and more tailored, like the house finally found its favorite sweater.

That new sage tone plays beautifully against the black window frames, letting the tall divided windows read crisper and a touch more graphic. It also warms up the natural wood entry surround, while the dark roof and chimney keep the composition grounded and neat rather than overly precious—charming, but not trying too hard.

Warm White Siding

8/13
House Siding Color Warm white

The big change is the warm white siding, and it completely shifts the facade. It softens the compact bungalow form, brightens the vertical cladding, and gives the front elevation a cleaner, calmer glow without turning fussy.

Against the dark roof and black window frames, it looks crisp in a very “I woke up elegant” way.

That warmer siding also makes the natural wood entry surround stand out more, so the centered front door reads as the star of the composition.

The tall black-framed windows feel sharper, the simple roofline looks even more graphic, and the whole facade lands in that sweet spot between modern cabin and neat little charmer. Tiny change, big swagger.

Black Siding

9/13
House Siding Color Black

The big change is the siding color: it’s now black, and the whole facade feels sharper, moodier, and far more tailored. That dark vertical cladding gives the compact front elevation a crisp modern edge, almost like the house put on a very expensive coat.

With the siding turned black, the light wood door surround pops harder and becomes the facade’s warm focal point. The black-framed windows now blend more seamlessly into the exterior, making the front look cleaner, calmer, and a little dramatic—in the good way, not the soap-opera way.

Crisp White Siding

10/13
House Siding Color Crisp white

The big change is the siding color: a crisp white now wraps the facade, giving the little bungalow a sharper, fresher snap. It brightens the vertical board-and-batten cladding and makes the black-framed front windows pop like they suddenly got dressed for dinner.

That new white skin also boosts the warmth of the natural wood entry surround, turning the front door into the star of the show without any diva behavior. Against the dark, low-pitched roof and the clean, symmetrical front elevation, the facade feels more modern, more graphic, and a touch more smug—in a good way.

Pin this for later:

11/13
Fern Hollow Bungalow Floor Plan
12/13
Fern Hollow Bungalow Floor Plan
13/13
Fern Hollow Bungalow Floor Plan

Table of Contents