It's too nice for my chickens.... :(

Also, I'd either build it a LOT higher off the ground, or I'd build it as it currently sits, but screen the exposed openings underneath with hardware cloth, because they WILL: go underneath and refuse to come out; lay eggs under there; get sick or injured and need to be dragged out. Also non-poultry critters hanging out underneath - skunks, anyone? Or rats that ate poison bait somewhere and decided to die underneath the coop. :sick
 
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Id make it a screen/wire porch- possibly the whole place screened around it. then maybe add nest boxes and access to the back or side- and a steeple or cross vent with dormers on roof - and maybe add a storage bench or closet somehow on front also. He did it with just random little trees off his land and there aren't any nails in it beside the roof obviously.
 
That's a pretty awesome goat house!

Lots of work to use logs, but if I had all those trees I'd likely be using them too - will you be doing the same?

I could see this design being tweaked a little to make it into a chicken coop. This is probably what I would do:
- I imagine the porch is the run, so reverse the proportions so it's bigger than the coop/cabin makes sense to me. However, that's a really cool porch, so I'd consider changing the design to have a run extend off the back of this structure (with or without roof extension), so that porch stays clean for human use.
- Keep the aesthetic of being raised off the ground, but don't install a floor in the porch/run area. Keep the horizontal girder at that height, but add solid wall below it to retain bedding. Use 1/2" hardware cloth to block under the coop perimeter so nothing lives down there.
- Keep human door but also add chicken door.
- If you're concerned with draft and that type of wall construction, you could add solid paneling behind the slats. If you do that, I'd imagine it will breathe a lot less so consider adding another window somewhere, or perhaps leaving a way to keep the upper gables open (or to have an adjustable cover) might be sufficient for ventilation.
- Keep nest boxes internal and maybe add feed/supplies storage inside - for aesthetics.
 
Keeping chicken food on an open porch is a bad plan. Unless it is your intention to invite skunks, raccoons and other critters to tear into the bags and make a big honkin mess! Might work if you keep the food in critter-proof metal trash bins with raccoin-proof lids. And if you don't have bears.
 

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