Single Story, 2 Beds, 1 Baths, 900 sq. ft., 30×30 Modern Bungalow Floor Plans: Riverbend Scandi Square

Last updated on May 20, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

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Riverbend Scandi Square Design

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This is a compact 900 sq ft single-floor cottage plan with two bedrooms, one bathroom, and a very efficient 30 ft by 30 ft footprint. It is tidy, practical, and pleasantly unpretentious. No maze, no drama.

The facade uses a simple modern cottage form with a clean gable roof and a strong central entry. White vertical board-and-batten siding gives the exterior a crisp face, while warm vertical wood cladding frames the door and adds character. Large black-framed windows sharpen the look. The roof appears finished in muted gray shingles, with a straightforward chimney detail for a classic touch.

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

Main Floor

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Main Floor

The main floor measures 30 ft by 30 ft and contains 900 sq ft. The plan is split with shared living spaces on one side and private rooms on the other. This keeps daily activity open and social, while the bedrooms stay neatly tucked away.

The entryway leads into a central hall. Storage is handled smartly with a coat closet near the entrance, a pantry beside the kitchen, and two bedroom closets. The utility room also pulls service functions away from the living zone. Small plan, big manners.

The living room is the largest interior space at 234 sq ft. It connects directly to the dining area and kitchen, creating a clear open-plan rhythm. The patio adds 300 sq ft of outdoor-use space, giving the compact home some extra breathing room when guests arrive or when a chair simply needs sunshine.

  • Living Room: 234 sq ft
  • Dining: 92 sq ft
  • Kitchen: 100 sq ft
  • Pantry: 16 sq ft
  • Entryway: 26 sq ft
  • Hall: 60 sq ft
  • Coat Closet: 15 sq ft
  • Bedroom 1: 121 sq ft
  • Closet 1: 13 sq ft
  • Bedroom 2: 84 sq ft
  • Closet 2: 12 sq ft
  • Bathroom: 73 sq ft
  • Utility: 60 sq ft
  • Patio: 300 sq ft

We have more facade options of this design:

Urbane Bronze Siding

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House Siding Color Urbane Bronze

The big shift is the siding color: swapped to Urbane Bronze, and the facade instantly feels sharper, moodier, and more tailored. That deep tone gives the vertical board-and-batten cladding extra rhythm, almost like the house put on a very chic coat.

With the siding darkened, the light natural-wood entry surround pops harder and becomes the star of the front elevation. The black-framed windows look more seamless, the simple gable reads crisper, and the whole Scandinavian facade gains a snug little drama—without getting theatrical about it.

Dusty Blue Siding

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House Siding Color Dusty blue

The big change is the siding color: a dusty blue now wraps the facade and instantly cools the whole look. It softens the simple vertical cladding, gives the front elevation a calmer Nordic mood, and makes the natural wood around the entry pop like it knows it looks good.

That dusty blue also sharpens the rest of the facade without shouting about it. The black-framed windows read crisper, the pale trim feels cleaner, and the plain gabled form looks even more composed—quiet, neat, and just a little smug in the best way.

Deep Navy Siding

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House Siding Color Deep navy

The big change is the siding: a deep navy skin now wraps the facade and gives the little cabin a cooler, dressier edge.

It makes the simple board-and-batten front feel crisper and more graphic, especially against the black window frames and the plain gable roof. Moody, neat, and just dramatic enough to show off.

That darker facade also pushes the warm wood entry surround into the spotlight, so the centered front door reads like a glowing vertical accent.

The small metal awning, broad picture windows, and chunky chimney all pop more cleanly now, while the straightforward symmetry stays calm and Scandinavian. Tiny house, very composed face—like it suddenly learned how to pose.

Deep Red Siding

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House Siding Color Deep Red

The big change is the siding: it’s now a deep red, and the whole facade suddenly has more punch. That richer color gives the simple gabled form a warmer, bolder Nordic cabin vibe, while the vertical siding lines keep it crisp instead of costume-drama dramatic.

With the new red skin, the light wood entry surround pops harder, almost like the front door got its own spotlight. The black-framed windows and sliding glass door look sharper against it too, and the pale roof and chimney stay calm overhead so the facade doesn’t start shouting in all caps.

Olive Green Siding

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House Siding Color Olive green

The big change is the olive green siding, and it completely resets the facade’s mood. It gives the compact front elevation a softer, more woodland-tuned character, making the vertical cladding feel even cleaner and more graphic.

Paired with the steep gable roof and pale chimney, the color keeps the house crisp without looking too buttoned-up.

That new olive tone also makes the warm wood entry surround pop like it knows it’s the favorite child.

The black-framed windows read sharper against it, while the simple deck and centered doorway keep the composition calm and very Scandi. Neat, restrained, and a little smug in the best way.

Sage Green Siding

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House Siding Color Sage green

The big change is the sage green siding, and it gives the facade a softer, more woodland-tuned personality right away. That muted green sits neatly across the vertical cladding, making the simple gable-front form feel fresher and a bit more dressed up without getting fussy—very calm, very crisp, very “I belong here.”

With the siding shifted to sage, the warm wood entry surround pops more clearly, and the black-framed windows look even sharper against the lighter, earthy face. The color also makes the clean Scandinavian lines feel gentler and more inviting, while the straightforward roof and minimal trim keep the whole front elevation disciplined—like a minimalist that secretly enjoys compliments.

Black Color Siding

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House Siding Color Black

The big shift is the siding turning black, and it completely changes the facade’s attitude. What was once softer now feels crisp and tailored, giving the compact Scandinavian front a moodier, more graphic edge.

The vertical cladding looks sharper, the simple gable reads cleaner, and the whole house suddenly has that “small but formidable” energy.

That darker skin also makes the warm wood entry surround pop like a spotlight, while the black-framed windows feel more intentional and sleek.

The pale trim, light roof, and modest chimney stand out with stronger contrast, and the front deck now reads as a calm base beneath the bolder facade. In short, the house put on a black jacket and somehow got cooler.

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Riverbend Scandi Square Floor Plan
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Riverbend Scandi Square Floor Plan
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Riverbend Scandi Square Floor Plan

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