This transitional open-concept home offers approximately 3,152 square feet of heated living space, blending elegant curb appeal with the kind of everyday functionality that makes a house genuinely enjoyable to live in.
The layout includes 4 to 5 bedrooms, 3 full bathrooms + 1 half bath, a dedicated home office, a flexible game room or optional fifth bedroom, and an attached 3-car side-entry garage (~994 sq ft).

The overall footprint measures approximately 77′-10″ wide by 77′ deep, giving the home a broad, balanced presence that feels polished without becoming stiff. 0
This is one of those floor plans that looks refined on paper but still seems very aware that actual humans will be living in it.

Exterior & First Impressions
From the outside, this home carries a beautiful transitional style that borrows from French Country, Southern, Acadian, and Louisiana-inspired design. That combination gives the home a warm, elevated personality without making it feel overly formal or fussy. It has enough charm to feel custom, but enough restraint to still feel timeless. 1

The side-entry 3-car garage is a major plus because it helps preserve the front elevation and keeps the garage from visually taking over the house. That means the home gets to look like a home first, instead of a garage that won a design competition. 2
Open Living Core – Spacious, Bright & Designed to Gather
Step inside and the main living area opens up beautifully into a connected central space built for comfort and flow. The standout here is the oversized great room, which features a dramatic 15-foot vaulted ceiling, a gas log fireplace, built-in cabinets, and sliding glass doors that open directly to the rear porch. 3

That setup works especially well for:
- Everyday family life that stays connected
- Hosting without crowding
- Creating a brighter, more open feel throughout the center of the home
The open-concept layout is definitely one of this plan’s biggest strengths, though it’s worth noting that homeowners often mention a few tradeoffs with very open spaces, especially around noise and visual clutter. If you like connected living but also value acoustic calm, thoughtful finishes and furniture placement can make a huge difference. 4

Kitchen & Dining – The Real Heart of the House
The kitchen is positioned exactly where it should be: right in the center of everything. In a home like this, the kitchen naturally becomes more than a cooking zone. It becomes the daily command center, snack embassy, conversation station, and the place where people somehow only gather when you’re trying to carry three hot things at once.

This home includes a gourmet kitchen centered around a large 4′ by 9′4″ island with an eating bar, giving you excellent prep space and casual seating all in one. It also includes a generous 5′6″ by 4′10″ butler-style walk-in pantry, which adds serious storage and helps keep the main kitchen looking cleaner and more organized. 5
That means the kitchen is especially well-suited for:
- Everyday cooking with more elbow room
- Casual meals and family conversation
- Entertaining without isolating the cook
This is the kind of kitchen that doesn’t just look good. It works hard.

Home Office – A Very Smart Inclusion
A dedicated home office is one of the most useful features in this plan, and its presence adds a lot of long-term value. Whether you work remotely, run a side business, need a quiet planning space, or simply want a room where nobody asks where the charger is, this is a genuinely useful part of the layout. 6
That room can easily function as:
- A work-from-home office
- A study or homework zone
- A reading room or library
- A quiet flex room if your needs change later
Rooms like this tend to age very well because eventually, almost everyone finds a reason to need one.

Primary Suite – Private, Comfortable & Well Separated
The primary suite is tucked away on the far left side of the home, creating excellent privacy from the secondary bedrooms and shared spaces. This split-bedroom layout is one of the strongest design choices in the entire plan because it makes the home feel more comfortable and balanced in everyday life. 7
Inside, the suite is designed to feel both spacious and practical. It includes:
- Dual vanities
- A large shower
- A huge walk-in closet
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It’s the kind of suite that feels elevated without trying too hard to perform luxury at you.

Secondary Bedrooms – Family-Friendly & Flexible
The remaining bedrooms are grouped on the opposite side of the house, which helps create better privacy and a more family-friendly layout. One of the especially nice details here is that all of the secondary bedrooms include walk-in closets, which is a very welcome upgrade over the usual “small rectangle with a door and optimism” approach some plans take. 9
This setup works well for:
- Children’s bedrooms
- Guest rooms
- A hobby or creative room
- Long-term flexibility as household needs change
And because the home includes 3 full bathrooms plus a powder bath, the overall layout feels much more comfortable for larger households or frequent guests. 10
Game Room or Fifth Bedroom – The Extra Flex Space Everyone Wants
One of the biggest advantages of this plan is the flexible room labeled as a game room or optional fifth bedroom. That kind of versatility gives the home real staying power, because your life now is probably not your life forever. 11
That room could easily become:
- A media or game room
- A guest suite
- A fifth bedroom
- A teen lounge
- A hobby or workout room
That flexibility is exactly what makes a floor plan feel smart rather than just pretty.
Porches & Outdoor Living – Simple but Well Connected
This home includes both a front porch (~44 sq ft) and a rear porch (~255 sq ft), giving it a nice balance of curb appeal and outdoor usability. The rear porch is especially valuable because it connects directly to the vaulted great room through sliding glass doors, helping the house feel larger and more open. 12
That makes this home especially appealing for:
- Relaxed evenings outside
- Casual outdoor entertaining
- Extending the living space without overcomplicating the footprint
A well-placed porch doesn’t need to be enormous to make a house feel better. It just needs to be connected to how people actually live.
Garage, Storage & Everyday Function
The attached 3-car garage offers approximately 994 square feet of space, which is a major everyday advantage whether you use it for vehicles, storage, projects, or all three. The plan also includes about 42 square feet of storage, which is one of those deeply unglamorous but deeply appreciated details. 13
This home’s garage and support spaces can easily handle:
- Cars and trucks
- Tools and household overflow
- Outdoor gear
- Boxes labeled “seasonal” that somehow never leave
That kind of practical breathing room matters more than people think.
Build Details & Structural Specs
This home is designed as a single-story layout with a slab foundation as standard. It uses stick framing, has a 10-foot first-floor ceiling height, and features an 8:12 primary roof pitch with a 12:12 secondary pitch. The maximum ridge height is listed at approximately 29 feet. 14
Those details help give the home its upscale proportions while still keeping the layout practical and highly buildable.
Functional Features That Make Life Better
- Open-concept layout with a vaulted great room
- 4–5 bedroom flexibility for changing needs
- Dedicated home office for work or study
- Game room or optional fifth bedroom
- Split-bedroom arrangement for better privacy
- Large kitchen island with eating bar
- Butler walk-in pantry for added storage
- Rear porch connected by sliding glass doors
- Attached 3-car side-entry garage
- Single-story layout with strong everyday flow
Quick Specs
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Total Heated Area | ~3,152 sq ft |
| Bedrooms | 4–5 |
| Bathrooms | 3 full + 1 half |
| Stories | 1 |
| Garage | 3-car attached (~994 sq ft) |
| Front Porch | ~44 sq ft |
| Rear Porch | ~255 sq ft |
| Storage | ~42 sq ft |
| Width × Depth | ~77 |



