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Coop Expansion Project. Flooring advice needed

SusanJoM

Songster
11 Years
Apr 7, 2008
742
13
151
Santa Rosa, California
Okay folks, what do you think I should do here? The floor of the current coop is cement and I've been using deep (wow, very deep) shavings on the floor. I am about to cut through one wall and add an additional 4 X 8 to the current 4 X 8, but the new area has a dirt floor. Since it's already enclosed in a framed in shed, it seems to me that I have three choices for the new flooring: cement (but how deep?), adding wire to keep out rats and mice and leaving the dirt floor,, or putting down a sheet of wood flooring.

Do you have any particular preferences?
I'm gonna have to make up my mind by tomorrow (when I will have some available muscle and labor to help me), so any ideas you can share with me would definitely be appreciated.

Susan
 
I have a lean-to with a dirt floor that I am converting into a 12x16 chicken coop. I thought about all of those same options and finally settled on an elevated wood floor. I am using pre-made concrete footings (from Home Depot - $8ea) with pressure-treated 4x4's and reinforced with 2x4's. Then covering it with OSB (plywood). You will need to either paint/seal the plywood or cover it with linoleum (which is what I am doing). Avoid the stick-on floor tiles, as the spaces between tiles can become a breeding ground for all kinds of nasty stuff.

Hope that helps, I'm sure others will have opinions too! Thanks goodness for BYC!

(Edited twice because, apparently, I can't spell today)
 
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Personaly I would continue the concrete. It's fairly cheap $6.00 a bag. It only needs to be about 3" thick. Normal slabs and floors run about 4" thick. Put some plastic under the concrete for a moisture barrier. The tricky part is finishing it smooth. Brushing hides all the flaws but leaves a rough surface.
Then if you wanted, from there you could do a 2x4 floor to help keep their toe's warm.
 
I agree, in the long run you will have a consistent, safe surface and if you need a drain you can taper to it and install a rodent-proof cap with a removable cover for cleaning. We're lucky to be building our coop inside a barn with concrete floors, we topped the coop floor with planks which we had on hand, this will give more insulation and save bedding. I know some prople prefer not to use planks, but we'll sprinkle DE generously in the cracks, and having materials on hand (paid for) is always a bonus.
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