There's wood heat, and there's wood heat.
For radiant floor heat in northern areas, a bulk pellet-fired boiler is something to consider. A truck blows the pellets into a bin or silo. An auger feeds them automatically to the boiler firebox. Keeping the ash tray empty is about the only regular hands-on thing to do, and that is not a daily chore.
New construction would be a great opportunity to put together a nice indoor system, plan space for the pellet bin, and driveway access for the delivery truck. They don't have large power requirements, a home generator would run them in an outage.
You could still have a wood stove or fireplace for backup if there was a boiler problem, or for just a little heat in shoulder seasons. For that amount of firewood, a cord or two on hand, have it delivered cut and split. Done.
Another design consideration for northern homes is making it easy and worry free to leave them for a month while you visit Florida, S. Texas, AZ, the hospital, etc.

You don't want your home to be an anchor. If you design in the idea that the furnace
will break while you are gone, and you don't want your plumbing destroyed, you are miles ahead.