Wrightstown Modern Barn Conversion with Cottage Renovations
This barn conversion into a luxury home with a newly renovated and expanded guest cottage is the ultimate Bucks County retreat. The exterior is a careful assembly of natural stone, cedar wood siding (both painted red and selectively stained to allow variation and depth), cedar shake, and a standing-seam metal roof—materials that reference agricultural and vernacular precedents yet are deployed with precision and quality befitting a high-end residence. The existing barn’s timber frame was repurposed and exposed as a design element in the conversion; the heavy timbers are celebrated rather than concealed, generating spatial drama, structural honesty, and continuity with the past.
Upon entering the barn residence, one arrives at the central focal element: a grand wood-burning Masonlite fireplace that anchors the first floor and becomes the spatial and symbolic heart of the home. Flanking the fireplace, modern glazing—Marvin windows and doors plus VELUX skylights—frame the vistas of historic Bucks County, merging interior and exterior, nature and architecture. On the second floor, an open living space with a catwalk connects to three bedrooms, a bath and a reading nook—inviting a sense of lofted openness and connection. Real reclaimed barn-wood is used throughout the house—from custom cabinetry to trim work—to reinforce material continuity, narrative and patina. A sleek glass window wall with a custom open stair with metal railings ties the levels visually and literally, offering views from the lower level to the upper mezzanine.
In the primary suite, a dramatic floor-to-ceiling window wall brings in foliage and site character. With no wall space for a mounted television, a hidden hydraulic drop-down TV was incorporated— a clever, modern gesture in dialogue with the historic fabric. The suite also includes a gas fireplace, built-ins, a generous walk-in closet, and a luxurious bathroom: oversized zero-entry shower with blackout window wall for natural light when desired; freestanding tub; custom double-vanity; and separate toilet room. The lower level of the barn conversion houses the main entry (from the garage), a mudroom, a dog-wash station, laundry and a full home gym with lounge area—responding to the family’s lifestyle and modern expectations while being embedded within the barn’s volume.
The detached guest cottage was entirely re-conceived: rooms were removed to create a new open-plan living and dining space with cathedral ceilings and a central fireplace, and an open stair leads to a second-floor suite. On the first floor is a full primary suite, with a cleverly disguised walk-in closet and bathroom integrated into a custom built-in unit. Exterior upgrades include new plaster, stained cedar lap siding and paint, faux slate shingles, and an outdoor screened porch/deck with cathedral A-frame ceiling, creating a covered patio below and a full outdoor bar and entertaining area that leads to a fire-pit zone. Landscape architecture by Good Grounds Design created unity between the two buildings and the site, using natural-stone retaining walls, strategic walk and drive routes, and planting design to integrate built and natural systems.
Upon entering the barn residence, one arrives at the central focal element: a grand wood-burning Masonlite fireplace that anchors the first floor and becomes the spatial and symbolic heart of the home. Flanking the fireplace, modern glazing—Marvin windows and doors plus VELUX skylights—frame the vistas of historic Bucks County, merging interior and exterior, nature and architecture. On the second floor, an open living space with a catwalk connects to three bedrooms, a bath and a reading nook—inviting a sense of lofted openness and connection. Real reclaimed barn-wood is used throughout the house—from custom cabinetry to trim work—to reinforce material continuity, narrative and patina. A sleek glass window wall with a custom open stair with metal railings ties the levels visually and literally, offering views from the lower level to the upper mezzanine.
In the primary suite, a dramatic floor-to-ceiling window wall brings in foliage and site character. With no wall space for a mounted television, a hidden hydraulic drop-down TV was incorporated— a clever, modern gesture in dialogue with the historic fabric. The suite also includes a gas fireplace, built-ins, a generous walk-in closet, and a luxurious bathroom: oversized zero-entry shower with blackout window wall for natural light when desired; freestanding tub; custom double-vanity; and separate toilet room. The lower level of the barn conversion houses the main entry (from the garage), a mudroom, a dog-wash station, laundry and a full home gym with lounge area—responding to the family’s lifestyle and modern expectations while being embedded within the barn’s volume.
The detached guest cottage was entirely re-conceived: rooms were removed to create a new open-plan living and dining space with cathedral ceilings and a central fireplace, and an open stair leads to a second-floor suite. On the first floor is a full primary suite, with a cleverly disguised walk-in closet and bathroom integrated into a custom built-in unit. Exterior upgrades include new plaster, stained cedar lap siding and paint, faux slate shingles, and an outdoor screened porch/deck with cathedral A-frame ceiling, creating a covered patio below and a full outdoor bar and entertaining area that leads to a fire-pit zone. Landscape architecture by Good Grounds Design created unity between the two buildings and the site, using natural-stone retaining walls, strategic walk and drive routes, and planting design to integrate built and natural systems.
Project Year: 2025
Project Cost: More than $2,000,000
Country: United States
Zip Code: 18925
Others who worked on this project: WSCB, Inc.