Scandi Cabin Floor Plans: Mistshore Sand Path Cabin

Last updated on March 23, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

1/8
Mistshore Sand Path Cabin Floor Plan

This design is a compact single-story modern cabin. It pairs a clean one-bedroom plan with a crisp, minimalist form. Small footprint. Strong presence.

The facade is composed of two tidy volumes: a front-gabled main block and a flat-roofed glazed wing. The architecture leans Scandinavian-modern. White vertical board-and-batten-style siding gives the exterior a calm, tailored face. Black frames and trim sharpen the edges. A natural wood front door adds warmth. The roofing reads as dark metal, with a simple gable over the main volume and a low-slope roof over the side wing. Very clean. Very resolved.

These are floor plan drafts, and they are available for download as a printable PDF. They are easy to print, review, and mark up. Useful for planning, and mildly addictive if you enjoy moving furniture on paper.

  • Total area: Approx. 840 sq ft interior, within a 29′ x 29′ overall footprint
  • Bedrooms: 1
  • Bathrooms: 1
  • Floors: 1

Main Floor

2/8
Main Floor

Download Floor PDF

The main floor fits within an overall 29′ x 29′ envelope. The layout is direct and efficient. The living room fills the left side. The kitchen and support spaces line the right side. The bedroom and bathroom sit at the upper end for privacy. Hall space is kept lean. No maze. No nonsense.

  • Living Room: The main shared space, open and connected to the kitchen.
  • Kitchen: A compact working kitchen with a central island.
  • Pantry: Tucked beside the kitchen for practical storage.
  • Utility: Placed near the side entry for storage and house functions.
  • Bedroom: Located at the upper right for a quieter, more private feel.
  • Bathroom: A full bath with tub, toilet, and sink.

View more designs like this

Aerial View

3/8
show house aerial view

We have more facade options of this design:

Grey Color Siding

4/8
change house color to grey

Repainted in grey, the facade goes full minimalist-ninja. Vertical cladding looks taller and taut, sharpening the gabled front.

The natural-wood door now glows like a fresh toast slice, crisp against the darker field. Black frames recede, so the glass does the bragging.

The greyscale unifies the duo volumes—the pitched box and the flat-roof glass wing. Mullions seem slimmer, the roofline cleaner, and the base tucks into shadow.

The glazed corner turns stealthy-cool, while the boardwalk beelines to that warm portal. Same bones, cooler coat, extra hush-chic.

Black Color Siding

5/8
change house color to black

The facade is now black, turning the cottage into a sleek silhouette. Matte charcoal vertical siding sharpens the gabled volume, while the attached glass pavilion reads like a dark-edged lantern.

Shadow lines deepen the reveals and make the roof ridge look crisper.

Against the new black skin, the natural wood entry door becomes a warm focal point within its recessed portal. Black mullions outline the wraparound glazing, and the low plinth blends away, so the boardwalk seems to dock straight into the house—no gangplank required.

SW Urbane Bronze Siding

6/8
change house color to urbane brown

Switched the facade to Sherwin Williams Urbane Bronze, and the whole cabin sharpens—like espresso with windows. The vertical cladding in that suave tone deepens the gabled volume, while the warm timber door pops brighter, almost grinning at the boardwalk.

Black window frames read crisper against the bronze, giving the glass pavilion a slicker, gallery vibe.

The new hue thickens shadow lines between the boards, so the façade gains texture without adding fuss. It also syncs with the sandy site, turning the house into a low-key dune companion rather than a shouty guest.

Same clean geometry, but moodier, richer, more “weekend architect” than “camp shack.”

Red Color Siding

7/8
change house color to red

Now in red, the facade drops its quiet camouflage and goes full cranberry. Vertical boards read like firm ribs, and the gabled mass pops against the mist.

Black window frames and the glazed side wing snap harder in contrast. The recessed wood door glows warmer, a toast point in a tomato-soup wall.

The new color sharpens the silhouette, exaggerating the crisp eaves and tight ridge line. It makes the glass pavilion feel lighter, almost floating beside the main volume.

The boardwalk now zeroes in on a vivid red entry notch, spotlighting the threshold. Same minimalist bones, bolder heartbeat.

Forest Green Exterior Paint

8/8
change house color to forest green

Recast in forest green, the facade reads calmer and more monolithic. Vertical boards elongate the gabled volume, black frames and base trim pop crisply, and the natural-wood door turns into a spotlight moment against the deep green plane.

With the darker shell, the glazed living-room wing feels lighter and more gallery-like, its thin mullions strutting against the green backdrop. Eave shadows sharpen, joints feel tidier, and the boardwalk and tight stoop now laser your gaze to the entry—small cabin, big color flex.

Table of Contents