Custom Homes

Scandinavian Modern Custom Homes

Modern simplicity with genuine warmth light, calm, and crafted.

Scandinavian Modern is one of the fastest-growing idioms in the higher-end custom market, and it answers a specific desire: a home that is modern and uncluttered without feeling cold. It achieves this through light woods, simple and honest forms, abundant natural light, restrained black-and-white contrast, and a deep emphasis on craft. The result is a home that feels calm and contemporary while remaining genuinely warm to live in.

Forest Heart Builders builds Scandinavian Modern as a study in quiet quality. The simplicity of the style means every element shows: the joinery of the cabinetry, the consistency of the light wood, the precision of a plaster wall, the way daylight is admitted and controlled. Minimalism is not the absence of effort it is effort made invisible. This is craft-forward building, and it suits the firm’s integrated, detail-driven model precisely.

What Defines It

Defining Features

01

Simple, honest building forms with clean, uncomplicated rooflines

02

Light woods white oak, ash, pale-toned species used generously

03

Abundant, carefully controlled natural light

04

Restrained black-and-white contrast as the primary accent

05

Minimalist, frameless or slim-Shaker cabinetry with concealed function

06

Matte black or natural metal fixtures and hardware

07

Light plaster or warm-white walls and a calm, uncluttered material story

08

Built-in storage that keeps the minimal aesthetic genuinely livable

Materials & Palette

The Material Story.

Scandinavian Modern works in a pale, warm palette: light oak and ash, warm-white and soft plaster walls, and matte-black metal as the contrast note. Surfaces are simple and honest light stone or quartz, natural wood, plaster with very little ornament. The warmth comes from the wood and the light, not from color.

Element Specification
Exterior Clean siding light or dark contrast simple massing
Roof Simple gabled or low-slope uncomplicated
Windows Black-framed generous0 daylight-focused
Flooring Light-toned white oak or ash
Millwork Minimalist frameless or slim-Shaker cabinetry integrated storage
40+
Chicagoland Communities Served
Where We Build This

Across Our Service Area.

The Modern Farmhouse performs in nearly every market we serve — but it is especially at home on the larger, semi-rural lots of the Barrington area, Long Grove, Inverness, and the Fox Valley communities of St. Charles and Geneva, where the agrarian silhouette has genuine landscape to sit against.

On wooded or open-meadow lots, the steep gabled massing reads honestly; in established North Shore neighborhoods, a more restrained, painted-brick interpretation keeps the home in conversation with its neighbors.

Barrington

North Barrington

Long Grove

Inverness

Lake Forest

Highland Park

St. Charles

Geneva

Glenview

Northbrook

Our In-House Advantage

Building This Style with Forest Heart.

A Modern Farmhouse lives or dies on its millwork, and that is where Forest Heart Builders’ in-house millwork studio becomes the difference. The beamed great-room ceiling, the painted Shaker kitchen, the mudroom lockers, the window seats and the panelled hood are all built to the home rather than ordered to a catalog.

Our Work

Project Gallery.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked.

Why is Scandinavian Modern becoming so popular?

It answers a desire many homeowners express: a modern, uncluttered home that still feels warm and comfortable rather than stark. Its light woods, abundant daylight, and craft focus deliver simplicity without coldness, which is why it is growing quickly in the higher-end custom market.

Contemporary Modern emphasizes planar surfaces, expansive glass, and crisp material transitions. Scandinavian Modern is softer and warmer lighter woods, simpler forms, a focus on natural light and craft. Both are modern; Scandinavian Modern prioritizes warmth and calm over architectural drama.

No. A well-designed Scandinavian Modern home relies on generous built-in and concealed storage to keep the visible spaces uncluttered. The minimalism is the result of designed-in storage, not a sacrifice of it which is one reason in-house millwork matters so much to the style.

Yes. Its simple forms and emphasis on natural light pair naturally with a high-performance envelope and efficient systems. The style and high-performance building are complementary rather than competing goals.