Louisiana
The Louisiana borrows its design preference from the French settlements along the Mississippi River in the early to mid 1700’s.
Traditionally, these homes were adorned with grand columned porches, dormers, horizontal siding, symmetry, glazed transoms and side lights, as well as a double pitched roof. Many of these features were incorporated, which gives the house its connection to the Creole cottages of the Deep South.
The interior is a Central Hall form house with a Master Bedroom Suite, Powder Room, Laundry, Kitchen, Gathering and Dining area on the first floor with two Bedrooms and a Study on the upper level along with a shared Bathroom and a long Central Hall. Dormers allow natural light to enter each Bedroom while also flooding the Central Hall with sunlight and warmth.
Louisiana
The Louisiana borrows its design preference from the French settlements along the Mississippi River in the early to mid 1700’s.
Traditionally, these homes were adorned with grand columned porches, dormers, horizontal siding, symmetry, glazed transoms and side lights, as well as a double pitched roof. Many of these features were incorporated, which gives the house its connection to the Creole cottages of the Deep South.
The interior is a Central Hall form house with a Master Bedroom Suite, Powder Room, Laundry, Kitchen, Gathering and Dining area on the first floor with two Bedrooms and a Study on the upper level along with a shared Bathroom and a long Central Hall. Dormers allow natural light to enter each Bedroom while also flooding the Central Hall with sunlight and warmth.