The Lower Level Guest Bedroom: Quiet and Essential
The basement level guest bedroom was kept intentionally simple. A natural wood writing desk, a black Windsor style chair, and a wood platform bed with white bedding make it feel restful without any competing color or pattern.
Solid natural wood writing desk and platform bed
- Black Windsor style accent chair
- Ceramic lamp with a classic white drum shade
- Triple casement windows at the ceiling line for filtered daylight
- Textured natural fiber area rug
It is the house’s reset button. The room a guest retreats to when they need a long, uncomplicated nap.
Five Bedrooms, One Feeling
Designing five bedrooms inside a single home is a balancing act. Each room has its own character, but all of them share the same underlying palette and the same standard of materials.
- Every room uses at least one solid wood element to tie back to the forest setting
- Textile layering stays consistent across all bedrooms for a unified hand
- Every bed has a reading light within arm’s reach
- Every bedroom frames a view, a balcony, or a window seat that earns its own name
- Metals are mixed intentionally (matte black, brass, copper) rather than matched
The goal was simple. No matter which room a guest is given for the night, it should feel chosen for them.
These bedrooms sit inside the broader Suncadia project, alongside the staircase, the speakeasy lounge, the powder room, and the entertaining spaces.