14-1554 HOUSE PLAN – New American House Plan – 4-Bed, 3-Bath, 2,650 SF
New American (Modern Traditional), Transitional house plan with lap siding and stone exterior • 4 bed • 3 bath • 2,650 SF. Covered front porch, open-concept kitchen, flexible home office. Includes CAD+PDF + unlimited build license.
Original price was: $2,696.45.$1,754.99Current price is: $1,754.99.
999 in stock
* Please verify all details with the actual plan, as the plan takes precedence over the information shown below.
| Width | 52'-8" |
|---|---|
| Depth | 47'-4" |
| Htd SF | |
| Unhtd SF | |
| Bedrooms | |
| Bathrooms | |
| # of Floors | |
| # Garage Bays | |
| Architectural Styles | |
| Indoor Features | Attic, Basement, Bonus Room, Family Room, Fireplace, Foyer, Great Room, Laundry Room, Office/Study, Recreational Room |
| Outdoor Features | |
| Bed and Bath Features | Bedrooms in Basement, Bedrooms on First Floor, Bedrooms on Second Floor, Jack and Jill Bathroom, Owner's Suite on Second Floor, Walk-in Closet |
| Kitchen Features | |
| Garage Features | |
| Condition | New |
| Ceiling Features | |
| Structure Type | |
| Exterior Material |
Kathleen Chavez – March 27, 2024
Friendly invoice with transparent lines!
10 FT+ Ceilings | 9 FT+ Ceilings | After Build Photos | Attics | Basement Garage | Beamed | Bedrooms in Basement | Bedrooms on First and Second Floors | Bonus Rooms | Breakfast Nook | Builder Favorites | Covered Deck | Covered Front Porch | Covered Patio | Craftsman | Family Room | Fireplaces | Foyer | Front Entry | Great Room | Jack and Jill | Kitchen Island | Large House Plans | Laundry Room | Office/Study Designs | Owner’s Suite on Second Floor | Recreational Room | Screened Porches | Second Floor Bedroom | Traditional Craftsman | Walk-in Closet | Walk-in Pantry
New American (Modern Traditional) House Plan with Stone Accents and Transitional Curb Appeal
If you love the polished, timeless look of today’s New American (Modern Traditional) homes—but you also want a floor plan that feels practical, welcoming, and easy to live in—this design checks all the right boxes. The exterior pairs crisp horizontal lap siding with stone veneer accents for depth and texture, while the symmetrical window rhythm and layered rooflines deliver a confident, classic-first impression. A covered front porch and subtle metal roof detailing add a clean, updated edge, giving the home a Transitional personality that feels current without chasing trends.
This plan is built around what most homeowners want today: bright shared spaces, flexible rooms that can evolve with your life, and a layout that supports everyday routines just as well as it supports hosting friends and family. Whether you’re building in a growing suburban neighborhood, a wooded lot, or a more traditional streetscape, the design’s balanced proportions and material mix help it feel “right” in a variety of settings.
Exterior Style & Materials: Modern Traditional Done Right
The front elevation captures the heart of New American design: familiar, comfortable forms refined with modern detailing. The lap siding keeps the façade clean and orderly, while the stone accents ground the home visually and create that upscale, tailored feel many buyers look for. Rooflines step and layer to break up massing, and the porch provides a true “arrival moment” that makes the front entry feel intentional—not like an afterthought.
- Primary style: New American (Modern Traditional)
- Secondary style: Transitional
- Exterior materials: Horizontal lap siding with stone veneer accents
- Architectural notes: Balanced windows, clean trim lines, covered porch presence, and subtle metal roof detailing for a refined, updated finish
Because the architecture is rooted in classic proportions, you get curb appeal that ages well. The Transitional influence is what keeps it fresh: simpler lines, fewer fussy details, and a material palette that looks elevated and intentional.
Why This Floor Plan Fits Real Life
Modern Traditional homes succeed when the layout feels intuitive, and this plan is designed to support that. Think “clear zones” for living, working, and resting—without feeling chopped up or closed off. The plan concept prioritizes a central gathering core (kitchen + dining + main living) while still giving you options for privacy when you need it.
Everyday Wins You’ll Appreciate
- A welcoming front porch: great for morning coffee, neighbor chats, and creating a warm first impression.
- Flexible bonus spaces: ideal for a home office, study, playroom, or hobby room.
- Comfortable bedroom separation: helps reduce noise and creates better personal space for everyone.
- Storage-friendly flow: supports organized entry routines and keeps daily clutter under control.
Open-Concept Core: Kitchen, Dining, and Great Room
The open-concept heart of the home is where Modern Traditional plans shine. The goal is simple: make the kitchen feel like part of daily life instead of a separate workspace. In this design, the kitchen anchors the social zone—so whether you’re cooking for a crowd or making a quick breakfast, you’re still connected to the rest of the home.
Imagine dinner prep while kids do homework nearby, or friends gathered around the island with a glass of wine while the game is on in the adjacent living space. This layout supports it naturally. Sightlines are open enough to feel airy, but the overall organization still provides definition so the space doesn’t feel like one giant room.
Kitchen Highlights to Emphasize When Marketing This Plan
- Central island workspace for prep, serving, and casual seating
- Strong connection to dining for easy weeknight meals and entertaining
- Convenient access to storage and pantry zones (ideal for bulk buys and appliances)
- Room to upgrade finishes (quartz, custom cabinetry, statement lighting) without fighting the layout
Flexible Home Office / Study: A Must-Have Space
One of the biggest reasons buyers gravitate toward New American plans is flexibility. A dedicated office or study is no longer a luxury—it’s a requirement for many households. Whether you work from home full-time, run a side business, need a quiet spot for paperwork, or want a homework hub, the plan’s flexible room gives you options.
Designed correctly, a study can also become a music room, a craft studio, a library, or even a guest overflow space depending on your needs. If you’re building with resale in mind, a clearly defined office is a powerful feature that helps your listing stand out.
Bedrooms & Baths: Comfort, Privacy, and Convenience
With 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms, this plan offers the right mix of capacity and livability. Four bedrooms provide long-term flexibility—kids’ rooms, a guest room, and a dedicated office can all exist without forcing compromises. The bathroom count supports busy mornings and comfortable hosting.
Primary Suite: Your Daily Reset
A Modern Traditional primary suite should feel calm and restorative. In practice, that means space for a proper bed wall, easy furniture placement, and a bathroom that supports morning routines without feeling cramped. This plan is well positioned for those goals, and it’s easy to upgrade the suite with features like a freestanding tub, a larger shower footprint, or built-ins—depending on how you customize the CAD file.
Secondary Bedrooms: Versatility That Lasts
Secondary bedrooms should be more than “kid-sized.” This plan supports real furniture layouts and helps each bedroom feel like a purposeful space. That matters whether your household includes children, teens, long-term guests, or a multigenerational setup.
- Use one bedroom as a dedicated guest room with a comfortable bed and luggage storage
- Create a hybrid office/guest space with a daybed or Murphy bed
- Plan a hobby room that can later convert into a nursery or teen room
- Make room for future needs like live-in help or aging-in-place transitions
Outdoor Living: Covered Porch Presence and Curb Appeal
The covered front porch is more than a pretty feature—it’s part of the lifestyle. Porches slow down the experience of arriving home. They add warmth, neighborliness, and comfort, which is exactly why they appear so often in New American and Modern Traditional homes. From a design standpoint, the porch also helps scale the façade, soften rooflines, and create a focal point that photographs beautifully for listings.
If you want to extend outdoor living further, this plan style also adapts well to rear patios, screened porches, or outdoor kitchens. The clean Transitional character means additions can look cohesive instead of tacked on.
Energy-Efficient, Practical Construction Mindset
While finishes and décor get the spotlight, the best home plans also support smarter building decisions. The simplicity of lap siding lines, the straightforward massing, and the practical roof geometry often translate into efficient construction—especially compared to overly complex façades with too many jogs and unnecessary corners.
Many builders and homeowners also appreciate that Modern Traditional styling works beautifully with energy-conscious upgrades. It’s easy to incorporate better insulation, higher-performance windows, and improved air sealing without disrupting the home’s look. And because the exterior has a timeless composition, you won’t feel like your home looks “dated” as building standards evolve.
For deeper building-science insights on durable, high-performance exterior assemblies and smart envelope detailing, Fine Homebuilding is an excellent reference:
Fine Homebuilding.
What You Get: CAD + PDF + Unlimited Build License
This plan is designed to be builder-friendly and customization-ready. You receive both CAD and PDF files so you can move forward confidently—whether you’re working with a local builder, an architect, or a design-build firm. CAD files are especially valuable if you plan to modify room sizes, tweak window placement, adjust porch depth, or reconfigure certain spaces to better match your lifestyle and lot conditions.
- CAD files: editable format for plan customization
- PDF set: clear construction documents for quoting, permitting, and building workflows
- Unlimited build license: build the plan multiple times (ideal for builders and investors)
Customization Ideas That Pair Beautifully with This Style
Because the design sits at the intersection of Modern Traditional and Transitional, it’s easy to personalize without breaking the architecture. If you want a warmer, classic feel, you can push into richer trim profiles, deeper paint tones, and natural wood accents. If you want the home to lean more modern, you can simplify trim further, sharpen the color palette, and choose cleaner fixtures.
Exterior Upgrades That Enhance the Look
- Swap the stone type for a more textured, dry-stack look to increase depth
- Upgrade lap siding to premium fiber cement for crisp shadow lines and durability
- Enhance the porch with wood posts or thicker trim to amplify the “Modern Traditional” vibe
- Use darker window frames for a sharper Transitional contrast
Interior Finish Directions That Match the Architecture
- Modern Traditional: warm whites, timeless millwork, classic brass/black hardware, natural oak floors
- Transitional: cleaner trim, mixed metals, soft neutrals, modern lighting with classic silhouettes
- Upscale feel: tall baseboards, layered ceiling details, statement fireplace surround, built-in shelving
Ideal Buyers and Build Scenarios
This plan appeals to a wide range of homeowners because it is both timeless and flexible. It can serve as a “forever home” for a growing family, a move-up home with strong curb appeal, or a smart investment for a builder targeting broad market demand. The style photographs extremely well—thanks to the stone accents, the balanced windows, and the porch-driven entry composition—which is a practical advantage in today’s visual-first shopping environment.
- Growing families: 4-bedroom capacity plus flexible work/study options
- Work-from-home households: dedicated office potential and separation of zones
- Entertainers: open-concept core that supports gatherings naturally
- Builders: broad appeal Modern Traditional exterior + unlimited build license
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this plan considered Modern Traditional or Transitional?
The primary style is New American (Modern Traditional), with a Transitional secondary influence. In other words: classic bones with a cleaner, more current finish.
What exterior materials define this design?
The look is driven by horizontal lap siding paired with stone veneer accents. That contrast adds depth and creates a refined, upscale curb appeal.
Can I adjust the plan for my lot?
Yes. The included CAD files make it easier to modify dimensions, window placement, and certain room relationships to match your lot conditions and preferences.
What does the unlimited build license mean?
It means you can build this plan multiple times without needing to repurchase the license, which is especially valuable for builders, investors, or anyone planning repeated builds.
Will this style feel dated in a few years?
Modern Traditional homes are popular because they’re rooted in classic proportions. The Transitional details keep the look fresh, but the overall design is timeless enough to stay relevant for the long haul.
Bring Home a Timeless Look with Everyday Livability
This New American (Modern Traditional) plan delivers the best of both worlds: a polished, enduring exterior that feels upscale and welcoming, and a modern layout that supports real daily life. With CAD + PDF files and an unlimited build license, it’s ready for customization and confident construction. If you want a home that looks impressive from the street and lives comfortably on the inside, this is the kind of plan you’ll be excited to build—and proud to come home to.
14-1554 HOUSE PLAN – New American House Plan – 4-Bed, 3-Bath, 2,650 SF
- BOTH a PDF and CAD file (sent to the email provided/a copy of the downloadable files will be in your account here)
- PDF – Easily printable at any local print shop
- CAD Files – Delivered in AutoCAD format. Required for structural engineering and very helpful for modifications.
- Structural Engineering – Included with every plan unless not shown in the product images. Very helpful and reduces engineering time dramatically for any state. *All plans must be approved by engineer licensed in state of build*
Disclaimer
Verify dimensions, square footage, and description against product images before purchase. Currently, most attributes were extracted with AI and have not been manually reviewed.
My Home Floor Plans, Inc. does not assume liability for any deviations in the plans. All information must be confirmed by your contractor prior to construction. Dimensions govern over scale.


