Bodhisan
Songster
This is how I've successfully brooded chicks (the coop portion). I built a very, very simple elevated (above the nesting boxes) brooder that has a wood floor, frame, and walled/ceilinged with hardware cloth - and a swinging door. It is butted up against the side of the coop, with a little pop door and ramp that leads to their own enclosed run, which is just part of the hens' 10'x10' covered run. I use the heating pad method, having enough room in the brooder for them to be under it or outside of it. The pop door (about 6"x9") stays open, allowing them to organically decide when they want to come out and get some fresh air. Did this in April with 3-day-old chicks, when temps got down to the low 30's and pretty much stayed around 45 as an average until May, when it started warming up a bit - they did just fine. This gives the hens plenty of time to see them 24 hours a day - and for the chicks to watch my hens, and especially how to use the nipple water container when they're older. At about 4 weeks, I gave them an opening big enough for them to get in and out of their separate run, but too small for the hens to get thru, and they began getting braver, coming out into the bigger 10' x 40' run (surrounded by wire fencing small enough to keep out raccoons and bobcats - but they sometimes get visits from little juncosAll you really need is your heat-plate or lamp and your existing coop. If you want to keep your littles indoors for a week (no sauna needed) just set them up in a Rubbermaid-type tub with a screen over it. Your heat plate and all their "necessities" will fit in there just fine, and you get to enjoy your peepers "up close and personal!"
