Ashland
Take a peak at a work in progress. Green cabinetry, exposed wood beams, and intentional details throughout a four-bedroom home built around an open floor plan with views to the backyard.
Stone and stucco. The front elevation at 514 Courtyard pairs a stucco field with dark shingle roofing and black-wrapped trim around an arched entry, and that arch isn't just decorative — the masons had to template the curve so the stucco return inside the barrel stays uniform from the spring line to the keystone. Concrete walkway runs clean to the front porch, no unnecessary steps or landings. It's one of those things where the house looks simple from the street, and that simplicity is the hard part.
Dark green cabinetry with brushed gold hardware is a specific combination that either works completely or falls apart, and here it works. The white quartz countertop keeps the upper half of the kitchen bright while the gray tile backsplash introduces a third tone that mediates between the deep cabinet color and the lighter surfaces above. You can see the cabinet boxes are inset — meaning the doors sit flush inside the face frame rather than overlaying it, which requires tighter tolerances from the cabinet shop and cleaner scribing in the field.
Black accent tile running vertically beside white field tile in the tub surround creates a stripe detail that had to be planned at the layout stage, because if your grout lines don't carry horizontally from one color to the other the whole wall falls out of alignment. The shower niche is recessed and trimmed with that same black tile on the shelf edge. Plumbing stubs and electrical boxes are still visible in this shot, which tells you the waterproofing membrane and backer board went up before finish tile — the right sequence, done the right way.
Leaf-patterned wallpaper in the pantry is a bold move for a room most people treat as purely functional. White shaker cabinetry with open shelving above and drawer storage below lines both walls, and the countertops are white quartz — same material as the kitchen, which ties the two spaces together even though the pantry has its own personality. From my perspective, putting this level of finish into a room that's behind a closed door tells you something about how the homeowner thinks about their home.
Horizontally striped wall tile meets marble-look shower tile at a clean inside corner, and that joint is where you find out whether the tile setter knew what he was doing. The striped tile has a linear texture that catches light differently depending on the angle, so the installer had to keep each course level and each piece oriented the same direction — rotate one tile ninety degrees and you'd see it immediately. Glass enclosure keeps the wet zone contained while letting the full tile pattern stay visible from the vanity side of the room.