The home sits on a wooded lot in Peachtree City — a stone-and-brick estate with a paved approach in front and a pine grove out back. After dark, the property reads as a complete composition rather than a house with lights on it.
The plan layers architectural light onto the front: the stone façade washed at a level that reads texture without glare, the copper-trimmed garage doors held as focal points, gable peaks picked up at just the right intensity, and the driveway lit with restraint at grade so the approach feels welcoming without runway-light spill. The planting beds get accent and color, not floodlight.
Around back, shielded path lights at grade carry through the woodland between the home and a play area set deeper in the pines. Low uplight on selected trunks pulls the canopy forward; the rest stays quiet on the eyes. The property looks like the property — composed, intentional, and lived-in after sundown.





