generate a photorealistic left elevation rendering of a 1 5 story modern farmhouse on a sloped lot show only the left side of the house the house should have a very tall daylight basement foundation wall approximately 20 feet from grade to the first floor at the lowest point and the entire visible wall from grade to the main floor must be fully clad in white painted brick no exposed concrete no exposed cement and no unfinished foundation anywhere key grading slope requirement the left side of the house should remain low at grade across most of the wall do not let the ground slope diagonally upward across the entire left elevation instead the terrain should stay mostly low and flat along the base of the tall left wall and then begin rising only near the far right corner of the house where it transitions upward toward the front porch front side of the home in other words most of the left elevation is fully exposed and low at grade the grade only starts building up near the right end of the wall the fill slope is concentrated near the front right corner of the house wall fa ade design exterior walls white painted brick main roof dark charcoal architectural shingles windows gray dark gray window frames main gable siding white shaker shingle siding add a dark standing seam metal shed roof running horizontally across the entire lower wall stretching from near the back left portion of the wall all the way toward the right corner of the house it should visually help break up the large wall door placement place one exterior basement service door in the lower brick wall positioned 3 to 4 feet farther left toward the back of the home so it sits in the left half of the wall not near the far right corner the door should be under the long shed roof and should feel logically placed for the left elevation use a dark wood or dark painted door with a small concrete landing step style setting high end realistic architectural rendering red clay soil wooded background late afternoon golden hour lighting clean landscaping but keep the left side mostly open so the tall wall remains visible important composition notes this is a true left elevation view emphasize the height of the exposed left wall keep the slope low on the left side let the grade rise only near the right front corner make the result look elegant and proportional not awkward or overbuilt