
Navy and white, yellow door, corner lot at the top of the hill. A hundred years in — and the Lacewing landscape is hitting its May stride.

Flat corner lot at the top of the hill. Open in every direction — the Japanese maple does the framing.

Japanese maples on the parking strip, a natural boundary that took decades to earn.

5151 on the post, jasmine overhead. The arbor frames the entry — and the yellow door earns the walk.

Quarter-sawn white oak floors. Crown molding, full perimeter, uncompromised. A hundred years and nobody touched the wrong thing.

Corner lot light, two wall exposures. The floor plan doesn't force a conversation — it just makes one easy.

Large windows frame the greenery outside, blurring the line between the refined interior and the tended gardens.

Original glass knobs, brass hardware, faceted octagonal glass. Still here, still working.

From here you can see where you've been and where you're going. That's the circular floor plan doing its job.

The view opens into the formal dining room, highlighting the uncompromised molding and the transition to the private quarters.

The floors keep going. Dining room left, bath right, stairway ahead — the house is just getting started.

Deep navy walls, white crown molding, corner windows on two sides. The dining room doesn't whisper.

The dining room sits between the kitchen and the living room. (That's not an accident — that's the plan.)

From the dining table: kitchen left, living room right. Now you see it — the circular plan doing exactly what it promised.

The eating nook tucks in beside the sink — built-in bench, pendant light, east-facing window. Practical and considered in equal measure.

The $100,000 remodel didn't miss. BlueStar range, butcher block, white shaker cabinetry, blue and white ceramic mosaic. Function first — and it shows.

Looking back toward the dining room — the kitchen stays connected to the party. Marmoleum underfoot, cased opening straight ahead.

Butcher block meets tumbled crema marfil marble at the sink. Chrome bridge faucet, garden window, morning light. The details hold up close.

Divided lite Craftsman back door, built-in bench, floor-to-ceiling pantry. Everything you need before you hit the deck.

One room, three glimpses — bedroom, flex space, bath. The circular floor plan isn't an abstraction. This is what it looks like.

Original red fir, a window, a door to the rest of the house. Nothing extra. Nothing missing.

Navy walls, full-wall built-ins, a window into the trees. Home office, music room, or walk-in closet — the room doesn't care which.

Pedestal sink, chrome cross-handle faucet, white subway tile wainscot, black and white mosaic tile floor with diamond border. The main floor bath didn't try to update itself — and it was right.

Built-in bookcase, stair landing, blue sky in the window. A pause before the Craftsman stops being modest.

The roofline angles in. The triple window bank angles back. Original red fir floors run straight through. Nobody lost anything up here.

L-shaped, with the walk-in closet behind those two white doors. The roofline takes some of the ceiling — the floor plan gives it back.

Travertine tile, wood vanity, jetted tub, handheld shower, skylight overhead, built-in linen shelving. The primary bath doesn't ask for much — just blue sky and hot water.

Vaulted ceilings with exposed beams, deep burgundy accent wall, original red fir floors, multiple windows. Upstairs, the Craftsman stops being modest.

Nearly 400 square feet of vaulted, beamed, burgundy-anchored primary bedroom. The sitting area by the window is not an afterthought.

Two closets and a wall sconce. The primary bedroom covered the practical side without making a fuss about it.

The laundry room does its job. Custom built-in shelving, full-size washer/dryer, utility sink. Down those red stairs: the bonus room.

Painted brick walls, painted concrete floor, exterior backyard access. Cool in summer, quiet year-round. The seller used it as an office. The next owner will have opinions.

Off the kitchen, the split staircase drops you east to the garden or west toward the driveway and garage. New flagstone, exterior basement access just left of the stairs.

The east garden — established trees, metal raised beds, ground cover, Japanese maple at the fence line. Early spring — and it already looks like this.

The west garden — cistern, metal raised bed, Italian plum, deck stairs to the right. Fresh paint, 2026. The RainWise system is doing its job before anyone notices.

Two-car garage, concrete driveway, sub-panel, 240V outlet, Level 2 EV charger-ready, pull-down ladder to a large attic with real headroom. The parking situation is solved. (The attic is a conversation for another day.)

Flat corner lot at the top of the hill. 6,840 square feet. Detached garage, professional landscape, light from every side. A hundred years in — and the grounds are just hitting their stride.

That's Lake Washington. One block east puts you on Seward Park Ave S — Martha Washington Park, Pritchard Island Beach, and 300 acres of forest trails within walking distance.

Seattle skyline, Olympic Mountains, established neighborhood canopy. Twenty-three minutes to downtown by car. The city is right there — and so is the quiet.