https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/our-recycled-shed-coop
This is not my run. It is built by the same methods I discuss below. Very study.
scroll down to run construction. Note these folk used 2 stories of horizontal panels.
It would have saved them time and money and effort if they had just made
5x6 vertical panels and carriage bolted them togther, especially at the corners.
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Here's what I did that worked really well and very easy to build. That run handles rain, snow wind, just fine, it took an 80 ft. pine tree to smash the run. It missed the house.
A 6x6 coop ( you pick the height) is easy dimensions to build from bought lumber.
Building the run, I used an easy panel system,. I highly recommend a walk-in run. the first time you have to crawl thru chicken poop in a low ceiling run to retrieve a chicken you want to inspect, you will understand why, Been there, done that, yuck!
1. The sides: I made 2x4 panels that were 5 ft. long and 6 ft. high. I put in a horizontal cross bar 1/2 way up the panel. Since I had bought 8 ft, lengths of 2x4, I cut the 2ft. left from the verticals into 2 of 1ft. long pieces. Then I mitered them at 45 degrees and screwed then across the panel corners to add 45 degree stabilizers to each panel. Use a vertical 4x4 to mate the corners together and use carriage bolts on corners instead of screws.
2. The chicken wire: I stapled chicken wire to them. Raised them up in sections and carriage bolted the vertical sides together.
3. The "Apron" : When I stapled the chicken wire on, I left about 18 inches hanging off on the bottom edge. After I had set the panels upright and secured them to each other, I dug down outside the run and buried the chicken wire about 18 inches down to discourage anything trying to tunnel into the run. Others call this a "wire apron" around the run.
4. The door: For the door to the run, I took one of the 5x6 panels and made a smaller wire covered pane to fit snuggly inside it. Added hinges and a secure latch. The nice thing about this system is that you can easily add another 5x6 section. It's modular.
5. The roof: A 6 ft. wide run is easy to roof.
If you want a flat roof, just put in some cross beams and staple it down. Overlap the roof chicken wire on the to top of the horizontal beams by about 2 inches to make it harder for varmints to rip.
If you want slant to the roof for water or snow runoff, put in your cross beams. Then run a 2x4 down the middle of your "roof" , the 4" side being vertical. Miter and screw some 2x4 "rafters" from that center beam to the top edges of the 5x6 panels. If it was me, I would cover the run with chicken wire before I put in the beam and rafters.
Putting a solid cover on the roof is easy.
Solid surface: After all is done, find a solid cover for the run. I used two different ideas. A neighbor had a fiberglass sided above ground pool she was selling. I got it for about 25 bucks, pump and all. I cut the fiberglass sides into proper lengths and screwed them down to the roof with screws and wide washers. Lasted till the tree smashed it.
Tarp: Later, I added a 5x6 addition to the run. I didn't feel like adding a slanted roof so did the cross beam and roofed with chicken wire. When I roofed the addition I left a 2 ft. wire "apron" on the side of the roof which was mating to the slanted roof and secured the apron snugly to the slanted roof.
Then I got a stout tarp, about 6x8. Positioned it over the addition with overlap on each side. Went to
Walmart and got 6 of those bungee cords with the red ball on the end. The tarp would be fastened to 2 verticals n 3 sides. I put a big nail in each upright far enough down the upright so the bungee had to stretch, but not to its limit. Looped the bungees thru the grommets in the tape corners and pulled them down and around the nails. This gave me a nice roof that "gave with the wind instead of tearing because of the "give" in the bungees. W had some really stiff winds but it didn't tear.
The overlap of the tarp which was under the slanted roof, I affixed snugly to the underside of the slanted roof so any moisture coming off that slanted roof, would not leak into the poultry yard.
That's pretty much it. Modular to build, easy to construct, simple materials. Sturdy.
Best,
Karen