Architectural Feature
The style of this home
3822 Parkside Circle E was built in 2015, which means it carries the design priorities of modern construction: an open-concept main level, vaulted ceilings, durable finishes, and a layout that works the way families actually move through a house. This is not a home that needs to be "updated." It was built to current standards from the start.
The bones
Built in 2015 on a 0.13-acre lot in Martin's Run, the home spans 1,774 square feet across a single-story layout with an unfinished basement. The construction uses vinyl siding with white trim, a shingled roof, and a concrete driveway leading to a 2-car attached garage. The year of build means the electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and structural components are all within modern code and expected service life. There is no 30-year-old roof to worry about, no aging furnace to budget for.
The vaulted ceilings throughout the main living areas are a defining structural feature. They open the rooms beyond their square footage and give the open-concept layout a sense of volume that flat ceilings cannot match.
The open-concept layout
The main level flows from the entryway into a connected living room, dining area, and kitchen. The vaulted ceiling carries across these spaces, unifying them. The kitchen features dark wood-laminate cabinetry, laminate countertops with a tile backsplash, a breakfast bar with pendant lighting, and wood-look vinyl flooring that transitions cleanly from the carpeted living areas. It is a practical kitchen designed for daily use, with enough counter space for actual cooking and a breakfast bar that keeps the cook connected to the room.
The owner's suite
The owner's suite is the room that differentiates this home from other 3-beds in the price range. The previous owner soundproofed the walls, creating a genuine retreat from the rest of the house. The suite includes an attached bathroom with a dark wood vanity and a walk-in closet. It is the kind of room that earns its name: quiet, private, and set apart.
The updates
A new hot water tank was installed in 2025, one of the practical updates that come with a home this recent. The 2015 build date means most major systems are well within their expected service life. Beyond the hot water tank, the home's condition reflects consistent maintenance rather than a series of reactive repairs.
The unfinished basement
The basement is large, unfinished, and already plumbed for a full bathroom. This is not a throwaway square footage line. It is future living space with the hardest part, plumbing, already done. A rec room, a home office, a workout space, a guest suite, or a combination of all four, the basement gives the next owner a blank canvas with the infrastructure in place.
The outdoor space
The oversized patio with pergola extends the living space outdoors. The backyard is enclosed with a wood and vinyl privacy fence, creating a defined outdoor room for grilling, dining, and relaxing. For a home in this price range, the quality of the outdoor living space is notable. This is not a token concrete pad. It is a properly sized patio with a structure over it.
What it adds up to
This is a 2015-built home that avoids the typical trade-offs of the price range. The open-concept layout works. The owner's suite is genuinely private. The basement has real potential. The outdoor space is functional and finished. And the tax abatement, 75% from 2026 through 2030, makes the ownership math substantially more favorable than a comparable home without one. For buyers looking for modern construction, move-in readiness, and room to grow, 3822 Parkside Circle E is worth a close look.