- Feb 27, 2014
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Will you be putting rigid insulation under the floor before you assemble?
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Will you be putting rigid insulation under the floor before you assemble?
Yes we will be doing insulation under the floor and in the walls too.
I am not an expert but I see in your Coop Decking photo, you are laying the plywood across the flooring, which will tie it together well. You might want to consider tongue and groove flooring plywood then and lock in the 1' piece. Personally, I would go the other way and the joint between sheets of plywood will/should end up on a joist, thereby preventing sag. With the one foot piece, you will find it will be soft there at the joint unless it is a glued T&G joint or supported underneath.
Just a thought.....looks great. You are further along with Sketchup than me.
Now, if there was only a program to convince my wife that we need chickens....;-)
Cheers,
Being that I'm in Wisconsin it is still COLD. At this rate we won't be able to build our coop until May. We are expected to get more snow tomorrow too! UGH! I'm designing my coop in sketchup. Therefore, I will have a very good plan set in place and theoretically could build the walls and sections of the coop in our garage to get a head start on the coop. Then I'm thinking once the snow melts and the ground thaws more - we can basically put all those pieces together.
Anyone else do this?? My husband thinks we could be setting ourselves up for problems by doing this.
You really don't need to add any insulation. The chickens already come with perfect insulation of their own. If you add insulation to a coop, you will have to install interior walls. Otherwise the birds will happily shred it to bits. But, when you add interior walls to a coop, you will have provided a nice hidden place for mice, and/or insect pests to set up housekeeping of their own. You really want to be able to see ALL of the interior of the coop. Also, are you planning on raising the coop up off the ground, at least a foot or two? Again, you really want to be able to see what's going on under there. Besides the benefit of being able to see under the coop, your birds will thank you for the nice shady place in the summer.
Really, insulation, like adding heat, for a coop is a waste of time and $$. I have an open-air coop. The whole front is wide open year round. I get temps into the single digits, not including wind chill, and birds have no problems at all. They are built to handle the cold. Summer heat is what can cause a problem for them.
I was going to insulate mine but now that I've kept them through a winter, I have found that the more air tight the coop is, the more likely your chickens will suffer from frostbite. We had temps to -12 this winter and -30 wind chills, not common at all for Missouri but it does happen. I saw a coop that had half of the entire front wall covered only in wire and facing south and his birds did just fine. They are more cold hardy than many realize.
The second pic shows the way to go. Like Shawn said, you would have a bunch of flex, with that one foot piece of plywood. In the second pic, the floor decking is totally supported by the floor joists.