Single Floor, 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 522 sq. ft. House Floor Plans: Mid-Century Magic Nestled in Leafy Comfort

Last updated on March 26, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

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Mid-Century Magic Nestled in Leafy Comfort Floor Plan

This design is a compact mid-century modern single-story house plan with one bedroom, one bathroom, and an attached carport. It is small, smart, and trimmed of fluff.

The facade is low, clean, and distinctly modern. A broad low-pitched roof with deep overhangs gives the house its long horizontal stance. Vertical siding, warm wood accents, and a stone chimney wall add texture without clutter. Large front windows brighten the main living space. The roofing reads as a sleek metal finish, which suits the crisp lines very well.

These are floor plan drafts, and they are available for download as a printable PDF. Handy for planning, markup, or a mildly dramatic discussion about furniture placement.

  • Total area: 522 sq. ft.
  • Bedrooms: 1
  • Bathrooms: 1
  • Floors: 1

Main Floor

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Main Floor

Download Floor PDF

The main floor is arranged in a compact 30′ by 19′ footprint, or 522 square feet of interior living space. The layout is simple and efficient. Open living happens on the right. Private and utility spaces sit on the left. The attached carport extends from the side for easy covered access.

  • Kitchen: It uses long perimeter counters and a central island for extra prep space.
  • Living Room: It is open to the kitchen and placed at the front for the best light. Small house, big social zone.
  • Bedroom: It is tucked into the left rear portion of the plan for privacy.
  • Bathroom: It includes a shower, toilet, and vanity in a compact, efficient arrangement.
  • Utility: A practical little room, because chores also need square footage.
  • Carport: It sits on the left side and gives the plan a useful sheltered edge.

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Mid-Century Magic Nestled in Leafy Comfort Floor Plan

We have more facade options of this design:

Dark Grey Siding

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house siding color dark grey

The siding shifts to a deep dark gray, giving the facade a sleeker, more modern snap. Against this charcoal backdrop, the warm wood eaves, carport posts, and horizontal porch screen leap forward, while the stone chimney steps into spotlight duty.

The white window grid pops harder—like it just discovered contrast.

Darker cladding tightens the vertical rhythm, making the low-slung front gable read cleaner and the window wall feel larger. The wood door now glows like a butterscotch bookmark tucked between stone and glass, and the broad overhangs look more sculpted.

Same bones, new mood: cooler, sharper, confidently mid-century.

Deep Red Siding

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house siding color deep red

The siding switched to deep red—no more muted neutrals—which instantly sharpens the facade. The color heightens the board-and-batten rhythm and throws crisp contrast onto the pale stone chimney.

White-framed windows pop harder, and the warm cedar fascia, screen wall, and front door feel richer—like the house put on its best boots.

With the new hue, the low-slung shed roof and carport lines read cleaner, emphasizing the jaunty mid-century stance. Overhang shadows deepen, turning the chimney into the headline and the glazing wall into the trusty sidekick.

The entry nook now snaps against the red backdrop, while trim and planter box stitching keeps it cohesive—stylish, with a little spice.

Deep Blue Siding

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house siding color deep blue

The siding just dove into deep blue, snapping the facade from mellow to crisp. Against the cedar eaves and carport, the color sharpens the low-slung, asymmetrical roof and makes the stone chimney read like a warm spine.

White window mullions now sparkle, and that big angled glass feels extra clean—like it ironed its shirt.

The deeper hue tightens the vertical board rhythm and picture-frames the window wall. Cedar planter and door glow brighter by contrast, while the broad overhangs and exposed rafters look sleeker—wing tips up.

Small footprint, bold statement; the new blue wears this mid-century shell like a tux.

Bronze Color Siding

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house siding color bronze

The siding now wears a rich bronze, giving the vertical boards a warm metallic glow that sharpens the asymmetrical roofline. Against it, the stacked-stone chimney reads crisper, and the white window grid flashes brighter—like it just got new glasses.

Bronze also amplifies the horizontals: the low front screen and the carport’s clean beams look more deliberate, almost stage-lit. The pale wood entry door picks up a subtle burnish, and the whole mid‑century face feels sleeker, bolder, and just a tad more glamorous without trying too hard.

Mint Green Color Siding

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house siding color mint green

The new mint‑green siding flips the facade’s mood from hush to hello. It spotlights the vertical boards, making the lines read crisp under the broad eaves.

Warm cedar trim, the planter wall, and the front door now pop like honey against pistachio. Even the stacked-stone chimney looks richer, outlined by that cool tint.

With mint wrapping the carport soffit too, the low-slung gable feels longer and lighter. The white-framed window wall gains extra sparkle, while the angled muntins echo the roof pitch with more swagger.

Landscaping greens rhyme with the color without swallowing it whole. It’s mid‑century cheer—basically a modern cabin wearing a fresh gelato jacket.

Aerial Wide View

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Aerial Wide View

You can see a low-pitched roof with broad overhangs, punctuated by skylights and a central chimney that quietly brags about the fireplace inside. You can see an integrated carport, a front façade mixing stone, wood, and vertical siding, plus a large picture window grid that gives it a clean mid-century modern vibe.

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