I thought I would share how our indoor brooder set up looks and what we did when they needed more space but still didn't have a finished coop yet!
We made our chick brooder last year (2018) using giant Sterilite bins (50 gallon - the biggest we could find).
I cut the majority of the lid out and then cut out some hardware cloth to match the new hole. I cut 1x2s to fit the top and drilled holes through the wood and lid in the corners and used bolts and nuts to connect.
I cut a small dowel rod to fit the corners and screwed them in. The short one is a few inches higher than the longer one. I nailed posts into the longer one and screwed the posts into the bottom of the bin, but they weren't really necessary and I ended up removing them for this year.
The initial plan was just to have 5 chicks, so this single bin would suffice. But....chicken math! We ended up ordering more and got a total of 9. So I a made a second bin (without roosts) and connected them to make a chick condo. For the lid on the second bin I just used washers instead of the 1x2s to hold down the wire, and while it is much lighter, the lid warps more easily and needs to be clamped on to the bin to not leave gaps.
We used the Mama Hen Heating Pad to keep our chicks warm, and used a nipple waterer to keep things cleaner. We lined the bins with puppy pads and then shelf liner on top to keep the chicks from slipping, but I hated the liner (not as easy to clean as advertised) and am not using it again this year - just the puppy pads for a week and then pine shavings.
Here are the chicks enjoying their new home and cuddling up under the heating pad.
The chicks are enjoying the roosts a week or so later.
Here's a stand I built out of scraps for the feeder to keep it from getting filled with shavings and being knocked over by the chicks flying on top of and off of it.
Our coop took a lot longer to build than originally planned...and after a month the chicks were getting crowded in their brooder. So I used baby play yard panels on top of a tarp and tied the tarp around the sides up to about a foot to keep the shavings in. I kept the brooder bins in the new area to help contain the food and give them places to go into and out of and to roost on. I covered the top with an old garden row cover (attached with binder clips) so they couldn't fly out, but we visited them often and took the cover off with supervision so they could hop up and enjoy what we called top time. The area was approximately 5'x5'.
Eventually they tore holes through the thin cover and we had some escapees! (Ignore the ridiculous amount of chick dust covering the room...it eventually got cleaned!) After this happened a few times, I replaced the row cover for an old queen sized bed sheet.
After 3 months of chickens living in the house and the weather finally cooperating but the coop still not finished, I moved the whole set up into our sunroom (and thoroughly cleaned our pool room of all that dust)!
While it wasn't too difficult to tear down and move the whole set up, the chickens were determined to stick together and not be moved one by one as I had planned. Most of them huddled in one bin that I carried out there, but Daisy and Lily (the Easter Eggers) refused to cooperate and I literally chased them through the house until I finally herded them out the door and they found their chick buddies again.
I hope this helps some of you looking for ideas to contain your chicks before they move outside!
We made our chick brooder last year (2018) using giant Sterilite bins (50 gallon - the biggest we could find).

I cut the majority of the lid out and then cut out some hardware cloth to match the new hole. I cut 1x2s to fit the top and drilled holes through the wood and lid in the corners and used bolts and nuts to connect.

I cut a small dowel rod to fit the corners and screwed them in. The short one is a few inches higher than the longer one. I nailed posts into the longer one and screwed the posts into the bottom of the bin, but they weren't really necessary and I ended up removing them for this year.


The initial plan was just to have 5 chicks, so this single bin would suffice. But....chicken math! We ended up ordering more and got a total of 9. So I a made a second bin (without roosts) and connected them to make a chick condo. For the lid on the second bin I just used washers instead of the 1x2s to hold down the wire, and while it is much lighter, the lid warps more easily and needs to be clamped on to the bin to not leave gaps.




We used the Mama Hen Heating Pad to keep our chicks warm, and used a nipple waterer to keep things cleaner. We lined the bins with puppy pads and then shelf liner on top to keep the chicks from slipping, but I hated the liner (not as easy to clean as advertised) and am not using it again this year - just the puppy pads for a week and then pine shavings.
Here are the chicks enjoying their new home and cuddling up under the heating pad.


The chicks are enjoying the roosts a week or so later.

Here's a stand I built out of scraps for the feeder to keep it from getting filled with shavings and being knocked over by the chicks flying on top of and off of it.

Our coop took a lot longer to build than originally planned...and after a month the chicks were getting crowded in their brooder. So I used baby play yard panels on top of a tarp and tied the tarp around the sides up to about a foot to keep the shavings in. I kept the brooder bins in the new area to help contain the food and give them places to go into and out of and to roost on. I covered the top with an old garden row cover (attached with binder clips) so they couldn't fly out, but we visited them often and took the cover off with supervision so they could hop up and enjoy what we called top time. The area was approximately 5'x5'.


Eventually they tore holes through the thin cover and we had some escapees! (Ignore the ridiculous amount of chick dust covering the room...it eventually got cleaned!) After this happened a few times, I replaced the row cover for an old queen sized bed sheet.

After 3 months of chickens living in the house and the weather finally cooperating but the coop still not finished, I moved the whole set up into our sunroom (and thoroughly cleaned our pool room of all that dust)!


While it wasn't too difficult to tear down and move the whole set up, the chickens were determined to stick together and not be moved one by one as I had planned. Most of them huddled in one bin that I carried out there, but Daisy and Lily (the Easter Eggers) refused to cooperate and I literally chased them through the house until I finally herded them out the door and they found their chick buddies again.
I hope this helps some of you looking for ideas to contain your chicks before they move outside!