Modern Cottage Floor Plan: Hillside Stone And Glass Lounge Cabin

Last updated on March 24, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

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Hillside Stone And Glass Lounge Cabin Floor Plan

This is the second version of the floor plans (revision based on your feedback.)

A single-story contemporary house plan with three bedrooms, one bathroom, and a large terrace. The design is compact, clean-lined, and pleasantly un-fussy.

The facade is crisp and modern. Low asymmetrical roof planes give the house a strong horizontal profile. Light stone cladding adds mass to the main volume and chimney. Warm vertical wood siding softens the side wing. Dark metal roofing and slim black-framed glass keep the look sharp and exact.

These floor plans are draft documents. They are available for download as a printable PDF, ready for review, markup, and a bit of satisfying plan-table drama.

  • Total area: Approx. 981 sq ft
  • Bedrooms: 3
  • Bathrooms: 1
  • Floors: 1

Main Floor

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Main Floor

Download Floor PDF

The ground level reads at about 28 feet wide and 48 feet deep overall in the draft. The enclosed living space is roughly 981 square feet, with a large terrace extending the plan to the right. The layout is simple and efficient. Bedrooms sit along the upper side. Shared living space fills the center and left. Service rooms stay near the lower end. Room areas below are approximate from the draft scale.

The kitchen and living room form the social core. A hall links the three bedrooms. The master bedroom is set apart from Bedrooms 1 and 2, which gives the sleeping zone a neat bit of order. The bathroom and utility room anchor the lower portion of the plan. The terrace is generous and clearly intends to become everyone’s favorite almost-room.

  • Living Room: Large central gathering area.
  • Kitchen: Open and directly connected to the living room.
  • Hall: Connects the bedrooms and main living zone.
  • Master Bedroom: The largest bedroom in the plan.
  • Bedroom 1: Compact and practical.
  • Bedroom 2: Similar in size to Bedroom 1.
  • Bathroom: Centrally placed for easy access.
  • Utility: Handy service space near the lower entry side.
  • Terrace: A broad outdoor extension off the main living area.

View more designs like this

We have more facade options of this design:

Black Color Siding

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house siding black color

The siding switched to black, throwing the facade into sleek ninja mode. It sharpens the low modern volumes and thins the shed‑roof silhouette.

Glass walls now read like art in a shadow‑box frame, while the pale stone terrace pops against the dark shell.

Where warm wood once punctuated the masses, the unified black wraps them into one bold bar. Horizontal boards read as subtle pinstripes, the chimney cube becomes a tidy pedestal, and the entry recess gains theater.

Small footprint, big swagger—basically a tux for a house.

White Color Siding

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house siding white color

The siding is now bright white, swapping out the former earthier skin and cranking up contrast. Against the jet‑black trim, thick window frames, and low shed roofs, the façade reads sharper and sleeker.

The stacked‑stone chimney and end wall pop harder beside the white, like stone bookends bracketing a glassy novel.

Vertical boards in white snag shadows from the deep overhangs, adding texture without fuss. The clerestory band looks inkier, and the corner glazing feels almost frameless—nice trick.

Stone terrace walls temper the palette, so it’s modern, not morgue; crisp, not cold.

Forest Green Color Siding

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house siding forest green color

The big change is the siding: now a deep forest green that shifts the facade from crisp monochrome to woodland modern.

Vertical boards read richer, throwing shadows that make the pale stone masses and charcoal fascia look bolder. Black-framed glazing pops like a single dark ribbon along the elevation.

That greener skin tucks the low, shed-roofed form into the trees, while the light stone chimney blocks step forward as anchors.

The terrace masonry feels warmer by contrast, and the roofline looks sharper—architectural eyeliner, if you will. Same sleek bones, just upgraded to trailhead chic.

Aerial Top-down View

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Aerial Top-down View

You can see the house using a crisp modern design with a low, dark metal roof, clean rectangular volumes, and large glass doors opening to the outside. You can see the mix of stone and wood cladding, a chunky chimney, and expansive tiered patios that basically turn the whole backyard into one big outdoor living room.

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