Single Story, 2 Beds, 1 Baths, 900 sq. ft., 30×30 Modern Bungalow Floor Plans: Fjordline Mountain Cabin

Last updated on May 19, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

1/11
Fjordline Mountain Cabin Design

order floor plans

This is a compact 900 sq ft single-floor home plan with two bedrooms, one bathroom, and a clean open living core. The layout is tidy, direct, and pleasantly unfussy. No wasted maze-space here.

The facade carries a modern cabin character with vertical wood siding, slim black window frames, and broad glass openings. A dark standing-seam metal roof gives the house a sharp profile, while the tall chimney adds a grounded architectural accent. The exterior reads warm, durable, and crisp.

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

Main Floor

2/11
Main Floor

The main floor is a simple 30′ x 30′ plan with 900 sq ft of interior area. The entry sits near the top center and feeds directly into the hall. Public spaces are arranged to the left, while the bedrooms and bathroom are grouped to the right. Efficient and civilized. The floor plan behaves itself.

The living room, dining area, and kitchen form the social side of the home. The living room is the largest interior space at 208 sq ft, giving the plan a generous central gathering zone. Dining sits close to both the kitchen and living room, keeping meals and conversation in easy orbit.

Storage is used with purpose. A 15 sq ft coat closet is placed at the entry for quick drop-off. The 16 sq ft pantry supports the kitchen. Closet 1 and Closet 2 serve the bedroom zone, while the 55 sq ft utility room keeps mechanical and laundry functions tucked away from the main living areas. Tiny spaces doing mighty work.

  • Living Room: 208 sq ft
  • Dining: 92 sq ft
  • Kitchen: 100 sq ft
  • Bedroom 1: 89 sq ft
  • Bedroom 2: 88 sq ft
  • Bathroom: 66 sq ft
  • Utility: 55 sq ft
  • Entryway: 31 sq ft
  • Hall: 96 sq ft
  • Coat Closet: 15 sq ft
  • Pantry: 16 sq ft
  • Closet 1: 24 sq ft
  • Closet 2: 25 sq ft
  • Patio: 270 sq ft

The 270 sq ft patio extends the plan outward and aligns with the main living side of the house. It gives the compact footprint a useful outdoor bonus zone, which is always welcome. Especially when the chairs start multiplying.

We have more facade options of this design:

Dusty Blue Siding

3/11
House Siding Color Dusty blue

The big change is the dusty blue siding, and it gives the facade a cooler, calmer mountain look right away. That muted tone softens the sharp cabin lines just enough, while still playing nicely with the dark standing-seam metal roof and the black window frames—basically, a neat little color team with no drama.

With the siding shifted to dusty blue, the pale natural-wood accent panel at the center pops more, and the front elevation feels more layered and intentional. The tall chimney, broad gable roof, and oversized glass doors still keep the facade crisp and modern, but now the whole house reads a touch more relaxed—like the cabin finally learned how to exhale.

Deep Navy Siding

4/11
House Siding Color Deep navy

The big change is the deep navy siding, and it gives the facade a cooler, sharper presence right away. It makes the simple cabin form feel more tailored, almost dressed for dinner in the mountains, while the vertical boards add extra height and rhythm to the front elevation.

Against that darker skin, the pale wood entry panel now pops much more, turning into a crisp central accent instead of just a quiet filler. The black-framed glazing, slim chimney, and standing-seam metal roof all look cleaner and more graphic beside the navy, so the whole facade lands with a moodier, more modern snap.

Deep Red Siding

5/11
House Siding Color Deep Red

The big change is the siding: it’s now a deep red, and the facade suddenly has much more swagger. That richer tone spreads across the vertical cladding and chimney, giving the compact cabin a warmer, bolder face while making the light natural-wood center panel pop like a neat architectural bookmark.

With the siding deepened, the black-framed windows and sliding doors look sharper, and the dark standing-seam metal roof feels even crisper above them. The whole front elevation reads cleaner and more graphic now—simple lines, strong contrast, and just enough cabin drama to show off without getting theatrical.

Olive Green Siding

6/11
House Siding Color Olive green

The big shift is the olive green siding, and it gives the facade a moodier, more tailored cabin look. On the vertical cladding and chimney, the new color feels earthy but crisp, especially against the black standing-seam roof and trim—very calm, very collected, a little smug in a good way.

That change also makes the pale wood center panel pop harder, so the entry zone reads brighter and more defined. The black-framed sliding doors and wide picture window now look sharper and more graphic, while the simple front deck feels even cleaner beneath the refreshed facade.

Black Siding

7/11
House Siding Color Black

The big shift is the siding: it’s now black, and the whole facade turns moodier, sharper, and a little bit dramatic—in a good way. That dark skin gives the compact cabin form extra definition, making the vertical cladding read cleaner and the simple gabled massing feel more sculpted.

With the siding gone black, the metal roof, trim, and chimney stack blend into a sleek near-monochrome shell, while the large windows pop harder across the front. The result is a crisper modern-rustic face, where the deck and glazing keep it welcoming so the house doesn’t wander fully into villain mode.

Crisp White Siding

8/11
House Siding Color Crisp white

The big change is the crisp white siding, and it completely freshens the facade. It makes the vertical cladding look cleaner and taller, gives the simple cabin form a sharper outline, and turns the black window frames and standing-seam metal roof into extra-snappy accents—basically the facade put on a tux.

With the siding now bright white, the natural wood panel at the center reads warmer and more intentional, almost like a little architectural wink. The chimney volume feels crisper too, and the whole front elevation lands as a neat modern farmhouse mix: minimal, punchy, and very much not in the mood for beige.

Pin this for later:

9/11
Fjordline Mountain Cabin Floor Plan
10/11
Fjordline Mountain Cabin Floor Plan
11/11
Fjordline Mountain Cabin Floor Plan

Table of Contents