
1958 on the outside. 2021 everywhere it counts.

Parking for six. Zero-step entry. One level.

Gated backyard access on the right. Japanese maple marks the entry.

The dogwood is in full bloom. The front yard is just getting started.

The renovation didn't stop at the front door.

The layout reveals itself from here. Backyard left, bedrooms right.

Floor-to-ceiling tile feature wall, wood-burning insert, slider to the backyard. January is covered.

From the fireplace to the dining room — the main living zone reads as one continuous space.

A separate dining room. Not every 1,470 SF rambler has one.

Eat-in nook off the kitchen. Separate from the dining room. Morning coffee goes here.

Gray shaker cabinets, quartz counters, stainless appliances. The 2021 kitchen didn't leave anything out.

The skylight lands right where you need it.

From here: breakfast nook, laundry, private bedroom wing, dining room, living room, and the backyard. The kitchen is the hub.

The private bedroom wing is one door away from the kitchen. (The fridge is in between, doing its job.)

In-wing laundry. Barely used Electrolux front-loads included.

The private primary: your own wing, own bath, own entrance from the kitchen. The rest of the house is down the hall.

The primary wing's half bath. Quartz counter, modern fixtures, and its own window for natural light.

Bedroom 3 is the smaller room of the four. Big utility — bedroom, office, or guest room. Crown molding either way.

The southwest bedroom. Hardwood floors and a tree worth waking up to.

Crown molding returns. Bedroom 4, hardwood floors, street-facing window with trees.

Double vanity for a shared bath. (Someone planned ahead.)

Fenced and private. The patio is bigger than it looks from inside.

The rear of the house from the lawn. The slider, the heat pump, and a fruit tree that's been here longer than anyone.

Second patio, fruit trees, Japanese maple. The yard has more going on than the first shot suggests.

Half a block to the Chief Sealth Trail. Lake Washington beyond. The mountains didn't have to show up, but they did.

The Chief Sealth Trail runs north from here to Jefferson Park. Seattle skyline straight ahead.

5,600 SF. The red line shows every inch of it. Fully pre-inspected and cared for. Level-headed, renewed, ready.