This transitional country home offers approximately 3,637 square feet of heated living space, blending classic warmth with polished modern comfort in a layout that feels both elegant and highly livable. The home includes 4 bedrooms, 4 full bathrooms + 1 half bath, an attached 3-car side-entry garage (~765 sq ft), and an optional bonus room (~807 sq ft) above the garage that gives the design even more long-term flexibility.

The footprint measures approximately 83′-5″ wide by 78′-9″ deep, creating a broad, upscale single-story design with room to breathe. 0
This is the kind of home that feels polished without becoming stiff. It has enough sophistication to impress, but it still looks like a place where someone would absolutely leave shoes by the mudroom and live a very good life.

Exterior & First Impressions
From the outside, this home carries a refined transitional country look that feels timeless rather than trendy. The wide footprint, side-entry garage, and balanced front elevation give it a custom-home presence that feels substantial without becoming overdone. Architectural Designs also categorizes the plan under Country, New American, and Transitional, which fits exactly with the home’s mix of warmth, structure, and updated style. 1

It’s the kind of exterior that feels expensive in a calm, confident way. Not flashy. Just very sure of itself.
Open Living Core – Bright, Grand & Built Around Connection
Step inside and the home opens into a central shared living area designed to feel spacious, bright, and connected. One of the biggest strengths of this plan is the vaulted living area, which sits at the center of the home and opens directly to both the kitchen and the rear covered patio. That central openness helps the layout feel airy and social while still maintaining a strong sense of structure. 2

This kind of setup works especially well for:
- Everyday family life that stays connected
- Hosting without crowding
- Creating a more open and luxurious feel without wasting space
The living room also features a dramatic 16-foot vaulted ceiling, which adds a lot of presence and makes the main gathering space feel especially impressive. 3
It’s spacious without feeling hollow, which is a very hard trick for a large home to pull off.

Kitchen & Dining – The Real Power Center of the House
The kitchen is positioned exactly where it should be: right at the heart of everything. In a home like this, the kitchen naturally becomes more than just a cooking space. It becomes the social headquarters, snack station, family meeting zone, and occasional life-management center.
This design includes a long kitchen island with seating for six people at the wraparound eating bar, making it one of the most useful and social features in the home. Just behind it, a large pantry sits behind a pocket door in the nearby hallway, keeping the main kitchen area cleaner and more functional. 4
The formal dining room sits near the foyer and includes a tray ceiling at 14 feet, which gives it a more elevated and finished feel without isolating it from the rest of the house. 5
That means this kitchen and dining setup works beautifully for:
- Daily family meals
- Casual island seating
- Holiday dinners and entertaining
- Standing conversations that somehow happen exactly where you need counter space
Study – Quiet, Useful & One of the Smartest Features
A dedicated study sits near the front of the home, which is one of the best placements you can ask for. It gives you a quieter zone away from the busier shared living spaces while still keeping the room easily accessible. The study also features a 14-foot tray ceiling, giving it a polished, upscale feel that makes it much more than just an afterthought office. 6
That room can easily become:
- A home office
- A reading room
- A quiet planning or study space
- A flexible work-from-home zone
A house this size should absolutely have a room like this, and thankfully, this one understood the mission.
Primary Suite – Private, Luxurious & Exceptionally Well Thought Out
One of the standout features of this home is the private owner’s suite, which is tucked away for comfort and separation from the other bedrooms. The suite includes a vaulted ceiling, giving the room an even more open and elevated feel. 7
But the real magic is in the suite’s support spaces.
The owner’s bath includes:
- Two walk-in closets
- A built-in coffee station
- Direct access to the laundry room
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That is not just luxury. That is luxury with common sense.
This setup makes the suite feel especially comfortable for real life because it’s not just designed to look nice. It’s designed to make daily routines better.
Secondary Bedrooms – Private, Comfortable & Family-Friendly
This home includes three additional bedroom suites, all lined along the left side of the design. That means each secondary bedroom enjoys a much more comfortable and private setup than what you usually see in many standard layouts. 9
That arrangement works especially well for:
- Family members who need more privacy
- Long-term guests
- Older children or teens
- Multi-generational comfort
With 4 full bathrooms plus a half bath, the home also gives everyone a lot more breathing room in daily life, which is the kind of thing you stop noticing only after you’ve lived without it. 10
Mudroom & Laundry – Quietly Excellent Daily Function
This plan also gets a lot of the practical stuff exactly right. A mudroom sits near the garage entry and acts as a natural drop zone for everyday life, which helps keep the rest of the house cleaner and more organized. 11
That means:
- Better transition from garage to interior
- More organized daily flow
- Less clutter spilling into the main living spaces
And because the owner’s suite has direct laundry access, the home’s overall routine flow feels especially thoughtful. That’s one of those details that doesn’t scream for attention but ends up being deeply appreciated.
Bonus Room – Massive Flex Space with Real Long-Term Value
One of the biggest strengths of this design is the optional bonus room above the garage, which adds approximately 807 square feet of flexible future space. 12
That room can easily become:
- A media room
- A playroom
- A game room
- A guest retreat
- A home gym
- A creative studio or second office
Architectural Designs also tags this plan with features like Media Room, Playroom, Loft, and Optionally Finished Bonus Room, which makes it clear this upper space is designed to be highly flexible rather than wasted. 13
This is exactly the kind of feature that helps a home age well with your life instead of outgrowing you too quickly.
Outdoor Living – Big Enough to Actually Matter
This home also does a very good job with outdoor living. It includes a 97 sq ft front porch and a much more substantial 513 sq ft rear porch, giving you a total of about 610 square feet of porch space. 14
That rear covered patio is directly connected to the vaulted living area, which helps create a much stronger indoor-outdoor flow.
This setup works especially well for:
- Outdoor dining
- Relaxed evenings outside
- Weekend entertaining
- Making the home feel even larger and more open
And because the plan is also tagged with Outdoor Kitchen, it clearly supports the kind of outdoor living people actually want to use, not just admire from the window. 15
Garage, Dimensions & Structural Details
The attached 3-car garage offers approximately 765 square feet and uses a side-entry layout, which helps keep the front elevation more attractive while still giving you plenty of practical everyday space. 16
Additional structural details include:
- Stories: 1
- Width: 83′-5″
- Depth: 78′-9″
- Max ridge height: 29′-6″
- Exterior wall framing: 2×6
- Foundation: Crawlspace standard
- Primary roof pitch: 10:12
- Framing type: Stick
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That gives the plan a strong construction profile and solid flexibility depending on where and how you plan to build.
Functional Features That Make Life Better
- Open-concept central living with vaulted ceiling
- 4-bedroom, 4.5-bath layout for comfort and privacy
- Dedicated study with tray ceiling
- Private owner’s suite with coffee station
- Two walk-in closets in the primary bath
- Laundry access directly from the owner’s suite
- Large kitchen island with seating for six
- Butler-style walk-in pantry behind pocket door
- Optional 807 sq ft bonus room above garage
- 3-car side-entry garage and mudroom drop zone
- Rear covered patio with strong indoor-outdoor flow
Quick Specs
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Total Heated Area | ~3,637 sq ft |
| Bedrooms | 4 |
| Bathrooms | 4 full + 1 half |
| Stories | 1 |
| Bonus Room | ~807 sq ft |
| Garage | 3-car attached (~765 sq ft) |
| Front Porch | ~97 sq ft |
| Rear Porch | ~513 sq ft |
| Storage | ~130 sq ft |
| Width × Depth | ~83′-5″ × 78′-9″ |
| Ceiling Heights | 10′ first floor / 9′ optional second |
| Exterior Walls | 2×6 |
Estimated U.S. Build Cost
Typical U.S. construction costs for a transitional country home of this size and feature level generally range between $190 and $370 per square foot, depending on region, labor, finish quality, roof complexity, and outdoor living upgrades. Architectural Designs also offers a location-based cost-to-build report for this exact plan, which is a good sign that final costs can vary meaningfully by build area. 18
For this 3,637 sq ft home, that places the estimated build cost around:
- Low estimate: $691,000
- High estimate: $1,345,000
- Mid-range realistic build: $845,000 – $1,080,000
Because this home includes a large bonus room, 3-car garage, vaulted living room, premium owner’s suite, and generous porch space, actual costs can drift upward very quickly once the phrase “let’s just make it nicer” enters the building conversation.
Why This Home Works So Well
This transitional country home stands out because it delivers something better than just square footage: smart luxury.
It gives you the elegant spaces people want, the practical flow people need, and enough flexibility to adapt as life changes. The study, private owner’s suite, bonus room, mudroom, and open living core all work together to make this house feel not just beautiful, but deeply livable.



