Homes like this are rare. Not just for where they sit, but for how they quietly change the lives inside them. Every window, every room, every reflection off the water slowly rewrites what “home” feels like. This 1982 three-bedroom, two-bath residence doesn’t shout for attention, yet it lingers in your mind long afte… Continues…
Set along the water’s edge, this home offers a kind of calm that can’t be staged. Morning light moves gently across the rooms, evenings settle into soft reflections outside the windows, and ordinary routines—coffee, conversation, quiet work—take on a slower, more deliberate rhythm. The three-bedroom layout and two bathrooms keep daily life practical and organized, yet the house never feels rigid. Its 1982 construction brings a sense of solidity, the kind of structure that invites you to make changes without ever worrying about what’s underneath.
Over time, the spaces begin to mirror their owners: a bedroom turned studio, a study that once was a nursery, a guest room that becomes the heart of visiting summers. What doesn’t change is the presence of the water—steady, reflective, always there in the background. This is less a property to pass through and more a place to grow into, a home where comfort, setting, and possibility quietly come together.