Mid-century Modern House Floor Plan: Sunflowers, Stones, and Sleek Slopes

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

1/7
Sunflowers, Stones, and Sleek Slopes Floor Plan

Based on your feedback, we’ve revised these floor plans for the second version. You can see it here.

This design is a crisp, single-story contemporary ranch with mid-century manners: clean lines, a practical footprint, and an attached garage that behaves itself.

The facade reads modern and composed. An asymmetric shed roof slices across the elevation, punctuated by a clerestory band for extra daylight. Vertical board-and-batten siding in a muted tone pairs with a stone veneer wainscot for texture and weight. Warm wood-toned window and door trim adds contrast. Roofing is a low-slope shed profile in a dark, sleek finish—quietly dramatic, like a well-tailored jacket.

These drawings are floor plan drafts. They are available for download as printable PDF, ready for markup, redlines, and that one inevitable “what if we move the wall 6 inches?” conversation.

  • Total area (all floors): 1,664 sq ft (52′ × 32′)
  • Bedrooms: 2
  • Bathrooms: 2
  • Floors: 1

Main Floor

2/7
Main Floor
3/7
Main Floor

Download Floor PDF

Overall scale: 52′ × 32′ (approx. 1,664 sq ft).

The plan is organized with public rooms to the left, bedrooms centered, and service spaces to the right. Entry is front-facing through a porch into a compact foyer, then a central hall stitches the house together. The kitchen and dining align toward the rear deck, while the mudroom/laundry/utility suite buffers the garage. No wasted maze-like corridors. The hall is short and knows it.

  • Porch: Front porch entry (exterior space; area not labeled).
  • Entryway: Direct access to living zone and hall (area not labeled).
  • Living Room: Large front-left gathering room (area not labeled).
  • Dining Room: Open to kitchen, left side (area not labeled).
  • Kitchen: Central-left with island and rear access to deck (area not labeled).
  • Deck: Rear deck off the kitchen/dining side (exterior space; area not labeled).
  • Master Bedroom: Center-rear bedroom (area not labeled).
  • Master Closet: Adjacent dedicated closet (area not labeled).
  • Bath 1: Primary bath near master suite (area not labeled).
  • Bedroom 2: Front-center/right bedroom (area not labeled).
  • Bath 2: Full bath off the hall, convenient to Bedroom 2 (area not labeled).
  • Coat Closet: Near entry for civilized storage (area not labeled).
  • Hall: Compact connector spine (area not labeled).
  • Mudroom: Transition zone between garage and house (area not labeled).
  • Pantry: Right-side pantry off the mudroom corridor (area not labeled).
  • Laundry: Dedicated laundry room (area not labeled).
  • Utility: Separate utility room at far right (area not labeled).
  • Garage: Attached garage on the right (area not labeled).

View more designs like this

We have more facade options of this design:

Stone and Brown Wood Siding

4/7
change house siding to stone and brown wood

Swapping the facade to a mix of stone and brown wood changes everything. Warm horizontal planks now run beneath the single-slope roof, while stacked stone wraps the base and chimney, giving the low profile some handsome heft.

The refreshed skin crisps up the glassy entry and broad windows like perfect picture frames.

Stone bands now stitch the corners and the garage volume together, and the wood stretches the elevations for a longer, leaner read.

Dark fascia and trim punch the geometry, sharpening the roofline and deepening the entry reveal. Strong yet cozy—like a lumberjack in a tux.

Green and Yellow Siding

5/7
change house siding to green and yellow

First things first: the siding just went green-and-yellow. Alternating vertical boards swing between a soft sage and a sunny yellow, energizing the long, sloped shed roof.

Green wraps the garage bay and nudges into the entry recess, while yellow frames the main window wall for punchy contrast. Dark trim and the warm wood door corral the palette so the midcentury lines stay disciplined.

This new combo spotlights the structure—yellow brightens the clerestory panel, and green at the corners sharpens the silhouette. Against the light stone wainscot, yellow lifts while green grounds, giving the base real gravitas.

Slender eaves and window frames read crisper, like the facade put on precision glasses. Small swap, big architectural pop.

Black Color Siding

6/7
change house siding to black

The siding shifts to black, inking the facade and sharpening the mid-century lines. Vertical boards now read like pinstripes beneath the long shed roof.

Warm wood frames and the glazed double door glow brighter, as if someone dimmed the house and turned up the jewelry.

The dark shell also unifies the garage door with the main mass and pulls the clerestory into one sleek band.

Pale stone wainscot and chimney jump forward for contrast, giving texture a louder voice. Eaves feel thinner, windows punchier, and the entry more theatrical—no red carpet needed.

White Siding

7/7
change house siding to white

The siding shifts to crisp white, sharpening the mid-century vibe like a fresh lab coat. Vertical board-and-batten lines read louder, framing the warm wood windows and gridded entry door with snappy contrast.

The pale tone cools the muted green garage door and cleans up the stone water table below. Simple change, big swagger.

White also spotlights the asymmetrical low-slung roof and its dark fascia, making those lines practically strut. The clerestory over the entry glows brighter, and the black sconces and house numbers pop like punctuation.

Even the chimney feels taller against the light field. It’s the same facade—just ironed and caffeinated.

Table of Contents