The style of this home
Three-part series
4304 Prairie Loft Way NE is an industrial-contemporary townhome that draws its vocabulary from loft living: exposed structural steel, concrete block, polished concrete floors, and vaulted ceilings with visible ductwork. It is a home that shows its bones on purpose.
The architectural language
The townhome reads as industrial contemporary, a style that borrows the raw material honesty of warehouse conversions and adapts it to a residential footprint. Black steel I-beams are not hidden behind drywall; they are the defining vertical and horizontal lines of the interior. Concrete block walls appear as accent surfaces, not structural afterthoughts. The volumes are open and tall, with beamed ceilings that draw the eye upward.
The two-story plan puts the main living areas on the first floor, where the great room, kitchen, and dining area flow as one continuous space. A staircase of black steel leads to the second level, where the primary suite, a secondary bedroom, and a versatile loft occupy their own wing. The loft overlooks the main floor, creating a visual connection between levels that reinforces the home's open, loft-like character.
The materials
The palette is honest and tactile. Polished concrete floors run through the main living areas, cool underfoot in summer and radiant-heated in winter. Wood plank floors appear in the bedrooms and loft, adding warmth where it matters most. The kitchen pairs warm wood cabinetry with black countertops and a steel-fronted breakfast bar island. Exposed black steel I-beams punctuate every room. The exterior is finished in southwestern stucco tones that root the industrial interior in its high-desert context.
Skylights bring natural light deep into the volume, supplementing the windows and glass patio doors. The bathrooms feature textured plaster walls, exposed block accents, and modern vanities. Every material is chosen to age in place, not to be replaced in ten years.
The interior moves
What makes this home distinct from a standard townhouse is the volume. The beamed ceilings and open loft create a sense of vertical space that most two-story homes at this price point do not deliver. The great room reads as one tall, open volume rather than a collection of subdivided rooms.
The loft itself is the most flexible space in the plan. It can function as a home office, a reading room, a studio, or a third bedroom. The primary suite can be divided to create a true third bedroom if needed. The private balcony off the primary suite and the walled backyard patio extend the living space outdoors. A 2-car garage with direct access completes the plan.
How the style lives
Industrial-contemporary architecture rewards a certain kind of living. The open plan rewards those who prefer a few well-chosen pieces of furniture over clutter. The concrete floors tolerate real life: mud, snow, dogs, boots. The beamed ceilings mean the room never feels closed in, even when it's full of people. And the loft means there is always a second level to retreat to when the main floor gets busy.
This is a home for someone who likes their architecture visible and their materials honest. It does not pretend to be something it is not. That is the point.
In person
Come see it in person.
Photos only go so far. Arrange a private walk-through and we'll point out the details that don't show up online.