How to Build the Perfect Chicken Coop
Archicoopture /ˈärkəˌko͞op SHər/
noun
1. the art or practice of designing and constructing chicken coops.
Full disclosure, that is a word of my own making. But it really has become “a thing.” The simple notion of a chicken coop has morphed into a statement of personal style and ingenuity. A short perusal of Backyard Chickens is all one needs to see the endless variety and inventiveness in housing even the smallest flock of birds. Clearly, there is no right or wrong to coop design. But having combed through countless examples online and in person, plus having lived with the pros and cons of my own chicken house for three years, I think I can offer a worthy summation of the most important features to include in one’s own backyard Archicoopture:
- Make it easy to clean. Seems obvious but having a wide access point set precisely at wheel barrow height and width will make your future coop cleaning so much more pleasant and quick. Lining the coop floor and nesting boxes with vinyl flooring material will also have you thanking yourself for such forethought.
- Make it easy to control airflow. Aside from permanently open, screened air vents at roof level, your birds will likely need some degree of “air conditioning” on warm days, and heat containment on cold ones. In addition to their fun design potential, doors and operable screened windows will help keep your flock healthy by enabling better management of temperature and weather extremes. Windows also provide more light which means more eggs!
- Make it deep enough to hold several inches of pine shavings. Especially in colder climates, you’ll want those shavings to build up, meaning your bird’s entrance and nesting boxes should be raised several inches above the coop floor.
- Make sure you have enough height for one or more roosting bars where your girls will like to sleep; that they are removable for easier cleaning; and that they are placed higher than the nesting boxes so those aren’t used for anything other than egg laying (another pro tip to keep your cleaning chores to a minimum).
- Make sure you include enough nesting boxes, at least 1 for every 2-3 chickens. They should also be accessible to you from the outside to enable easier egg collection. And your nesting box design should include a slanted roof for the same reason as noted above (to deter lingering, because, well, chickens tend to poop a lot when they stay in the same place).