remember, if you get baby chicks from the feed store, they will need to be INSIDE pretty much until they feather out, unless you have provisions for radiant heaters (the
Brinsea EcoGlow is a highly recommended one) or heat lamps in an outdoor shelter or garage
I had an old under-desk radiant heater left over from a home office in the chilly basement, which we used
we kept the chicks in our upstairs shower (inside translucent plastic bins, then later extended that to a second "story" with cardboard boxes and roosts) ... and the chicks didn't seem to need quite as high a temperature as the "standard protocol" would suggest .. they were happy to run around in 65 to 68 degree room temperature, just occasionally sticking their fluffy behinds up next to the heater (supposedly about 100* but possibly not that hot since I could lay my hand on it and leave it there)
if you adopt mature chickens from one of us, of course, you can tuck your birds right into a coop
I'd enthusiastically second the idea of a coop put together with screws or bolts, from individual panels (a relatively cheap way is to use pallet boards, face them (both sides) with plywood or paneling) -- depends on your budget; often you can re-purpose a dog kennel or playhouse or storage bin, scrounged off Craigslist
I just realized I have an old plywood sandbox on wheels, hiding under some underbrush, now why didn't I think of that when I was agonizing about building a separate quarantine coop? ... it simply needs an A frame top ... it even has a long handle to pull it around ....
talk to ChickieLady about her way of constructing runs ... she's near enough you, just outside Raymond