
A 1915 South Park bungalow on a quiet corner. Covered entry porch, cobblestone path, and a wood stove flue that means business.

The driveway side: rock retaining wall, attached garage, and a basketball hoop that conveys. Mature trees on a fully fenced corner lot.

Cobblestone path from the front entry — rock border, spring bulbs already coming up, and a gate through to the back.

Welcome home. Two skylights pull light down into a living room that connects to everything — pellet stove in the corner, serve-through to the kitchen, open passage to the dining room.

Wood stove on stacked stone, mini-split on the wall, and a south-facing bay window flooding the room with light. A living room built for every season — and looking good doing it.

Every opening earns its place: wood-framed serve-through to the kitchen, open-cased passage to the dining room, two skylights overhead. Light moves through this room all day.

West window to the cobblestone path, wood-framed serve-through to the kitchen — this corner pulls in light and keeps the cook in the conversation.

Formal dining room is anchored with branching globe pendant. To the left, the ¾ bath helps keep guest traffic on this floor.

From the dining room, the open passage frames the living room beyond — mini-split, quartz ledge, and light borrowed front to back.

Board-and-batten wainscoting, brass fixtures, round black-framed mirror — the main floor ¾ bath punches above its square footage.

A kitchen reborn — new cabinetry, quartz countertops, blue-grey subway tile, stainless appliances, wall-mount range hood, and a wood-framed serve-through back to the living room.

The sink wall: oak-framed west window with sill shelf, matte black faucet, quartz counters. Light lingers here longer than you'd expect.

The full run: sink to range, quartz counter to counter — and the spiral staircase in the background is your first hint of what's below.

From the spiral stair landing: the globe cluster pendant, the dining room beyond, the kitchen beside it. One last look before the stairs take you down.

The spiral stair lands here — laundry to the left, daylight corridor straight ahead.

Fresh sheetrock, recessed lighting, closet space with shelf. Two zones — office, hobby room, guest space, or some combination of all three.

The full picture: two zones, built-in white shelving, LVP flooring. No windows — which makes it a natural media room — but more usable square footage than the bedroom count suggests.

The bonus room opens to the daylight corridor beyond — wall heater on board for the zones the mini-split doesn't reach.

The second bedroom — vaulted ceiling, mini-split, wall sconces, south-facing window. Not what you'd expect at this level.

The skylight seals it — vaulted ceiling, natural light from above and through the south-facing window. This bedroom lives above its grade.

The full bath serves both daylight bedrooms — white shaker vanity, matte black hardware, warm wood-framed mirror, and a custom tile shower surround. Renovated, windowed, and finished with care.

The primary bedroom: mini-split, LVP flooring, and three ways out — driveway, garage, and the exterior storage room.

Room for a king, a mini-split for every season, and a custom walk-in closet straight ahead.

The bed, the light, and behind it — a walk-in closet that means business.

The walk-in delivers: full custom organization system, floor to ceiling, with a deadbolted door to the exterior storage room beyond.

Straight from the primary bedroom into a single-car garage with high ceilings, built-in workbench, sub-panel, and two windows. A real workshop.

A purpose-built timber-frame chicken coop — concrete base, covered polycarbonate run, two windows on the henhouse. Built right, and it conveys.

Gate, canoe, compost tumbler — the far end of a fully fenced 5,100 sq ft corner lot.

Fresh soil in the raised bed, wire cloche ready, fruit trees just waking up, resin shed to the left. This yard has a head start on the season.

A residential neighborhood with real breathing room — Marra Farm's green space one block north, the Cascades beyond. South Park sits closer to everything than most buyers expect.

The P-Patch plots at Marra Farm, one block from the front door. Community farm, garden plots, park space — and Rainier on the horizon when the weather cooperates.

Seattle skyline ahead, Hwy 99 and 509 right there — 18 minutes to downtown. What the drone can't show: Good Voyage, Honor Mexicano, Loretta's, South Town Pie, and Little Jaye all within walking distance on 14th Ave S. South Park is the real thing.