A Florida Model House That Plays It Cool Inside and Full-Resort Outside

A Florida Model House That Plays It Cool Inside and Full-Resort Outside

New build in Brooksville, Florida, dressed up in warm wood, stone, and a backyard that goes way beyond “nice patio.” It’s a model, sure, but it feels surprisingly lived-in—like someone already figured out all the fun spots.

First impressions hit hard

The front shows off—stacked stone wrapped around clean stucco, with a mix of metal and composition roof lines that make the whole thing feel layered and solid. It looks expensive without being loud.

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The landscaping is buttoned up and simple, letting the covered porch do the talking. Wood plank ceiling, big lanterns, and enough space for a whole row of chairs that will never match on purpose.

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A foyer that tries to behave (but still shows off)

Step in and the ceiling flicks on its halo—tray with cove lighting, tidy moldings, and a calm color palette that’s very “we own a roller and a level.” White oak runs under everything and makes the stone accent wall on the right pop.

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The study is not modest. Tall ceilings, built-ins already in place, brass hardware that hits the light just right. Those oak floors keep going, so the whole front of the house reads as one long, clean line.

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Guest wing that feels like a small apartment

Down the hall, the guest room opens up bigger than expected—queen bed, wide night tables, pendant lights instead of lamps, and enough walking room that nobody bumps a shin in the dark.

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The ensuite sticks with the warm-metal theme—champagne bronze shower hardware, a small niche cut into the tile, and a crisp quartz counter under a wood-framed mirror. It’s a tidy little package.

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There’s even a walk-in closet finished in the same oak floor, which is a nice, quiet flex. No dead-end carpet squares here.

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The great room goes for drama

It opens up and the scale jumps—exposed beam spanning front to back, air everywhere, and that “this is where everyone ends up” kind of energy.

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Built-ins along the wall get arches up top, with shelf lighting and stacked stone backing things up so it all reads cohesive with the exterior. It’s one of those details you notice only after it makes the room feel right.

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Overhead, the chandelier drops in the center like a little reminder that this whole wall-to-wall hangout is meant for a crowd. There’s room for a proper dinner table without cramping the seating.

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Kitchen island big enough to be its own zip code

Double waterfall quartz, cabinets that go all the way up with crown, and a backsplash in the same stone so there aren’t a bunch of lines fighting each other. The island is comically large in a good way—plenty of stools, plenty of reasons to stay right here.

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They tucked in a 6-burner range and café-branded appliances, so the shiny parts match and the knobs all look like they belong together.

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Step into the pantry and it’s wood shelving wall to wall—no squeaky wire. It feels more like a mini store than a closet.

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A bonus room that soaks up the backyard

There’s this flex room off the main space—tray ceiling again, soft cove glow, big enough for a pool table or a huge sofa. It reads like the “everyone else can still talk while the game is on” room.

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Full-height windows frame the backyard like a screensaver. The whole view is palm-slow and bright, very Florida-on-purpose.

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The primary suite tries to steal the show

Big spread—king bed, an accent wall that quietly does the job, and a chandelier under another tray ceiling with that same cove light. It’s calm but not bland.

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One of the closets is huge and finished with wood racks instead of wire, which makes it feel like part of the room, not an afterthought.

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In the bath, pendant lights hover over long counters, and then it goes full spa: freestanding tub set apart from a super-sized shower. The materials are dialed to “glow.”

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The shower itself is built for lingering—rain head up top, a second head on the wall, a bench, and niches tucked where they’re useful.

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There’s a neat floor detail where oak borders tile like an inlay, and the French doors line up so the bath reads like a framed scene from the bedroom.

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Even the “utility” parts look camera-ready

A hall bath sticks to the theme—quartz, the same tidy cabinetry, and a single sconce over a wood-framed mirror that makes the whole thing feel finished.

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The laundry room turns into a proper work zone: inset cabinets, a deep sink with warm-metal fixtures, side-by-side machines, and long counters so folding doesn’t become a balancing act.

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Bedrooms three and four don’t phone it in

One secondary bedroom is staged as a craft room, which actually shows off how much floor it has—easy to picture it back as a bedroom without losing storage. It still gets its own bath.

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That bath keeps things simple and clean: tub/shower combo, hex tile underfoot, quartz again on the counter, and a sconce that ties it to the rest of the house.

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The other bedroom leans stylish—accent wall behind the bed and pendant lights dropping over the nightstands instead of lamps. It reads more boutique than “spare room.”

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Its ensuite switches the vibe: black quartz and dark hardware, just enough contrast to feel custom without fighting the palette.

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Drop zone and the door to real life

By the garage entry, a clean mud area with hooks and a closet means bags and shoes actually have somewhere to go. Three-car garage straight ahead—plenty of room for the toys.

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Backyard decides it’s a resort

Outdoor kitchen is built-in and ready: grill, sink, granite counters, the whole setup that lets someone keep cooking while everyone else keeps swimming.

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Overhead, the patio ceiling goes vaulted with exposed beams, and the big sliders from both the great room and the bonus room stack open so the inside and outside merge.

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There’s an oversized dining table out here that basically begs for ten chairs and a long, messy meal.

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The pool stretches wide, wrapped by an iron fence and a tidy deck. There’s a spa tucked in too—just enough elevation and curve to make the water look layered.

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Off to the side, a little strip of turf is turned into a putt-putt lane. It’s goofy in the best way and takes the edge off all the “nice” with something playful.

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And because one hangout isn’t enough, there’s a pergola for shade and quieter conversations, away from the splash zone.

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