What should we do differently? Have our fist dead chicken.

It would help us provide more accurate and useful advice if we knew your location.

Looking at the pictures, I immediately saw the problem. There is no ventilation. Lack of oxygen. That's why they are sleeping outside.
You said you are new to this so you are forgiven for not knowing that chickens don't need warmth, they need fresh air. They are wearing their warmth. They are outdoor animals and oxygen is more important than fresh food and clean water.
You also said they won't go into the warm dry area. But you then said water got into the coop so it was no longer dry.
Chickens can live in trees through rain, snow, wind and cold. Do you know why? Because they have fresh air. I have a hen right now that has been roosting up in a tree for weeks through cold windy rain nights. She shows up every morning to be with the flock.
Had I kept her in a closed up steel building, I wouldn't expect her to last as long as she has in the tree. The last 2 buildings I built have windows covering 1/3 of both east and west walls. Wind down to -19F has been blowing through there for the last 5 years. Never a sniffle out of a bird.
Chickens don't survive winter by being kept warm. A warm place with no cross ventilation quickly gets loaded up with humidity. That is a breeding ground for fungus, viruses, bacteria, frostbite and ammonia. I'd sleep outside too.
You asked what you should do differently.
Cut big windows and cover with hardware cloth if predators can get to the building. Preferably on opposite sides of the coop. East wall is most important if you are in the Northern hemisphere. Ignore the temperature, rain, snow and wind. It won't hurt them unless all your birds are frizzles and seramas.
 
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I agree coop needs more light and ventilation, while still being kept dry as possible inside. I prefer natural light which is most easily provided by windows, however a light on a timer or even a battery operated light you turn on and off will do if no other option.

Not sure how many birds you have or size of coop but you want to aim for 10% of sq ft or 1 sq ft per bird in ventilation. To deal with wind/rain, I aimed vents away from prevailing winds and used louvered covers facing towards winds. You have a covered run so you can open up quite a bit of the wall facing the run for both light and ventilation, as the roof will naturally provide weather protection.
 
or possibly not enough light for them to see to go in at bed time? But that shouldn't kill a bird. Maybe they just got wet and cold.
What area of the world do you live in, @murrychicken? I live in the Midwest, and it is getting dark pretty early. Then on a dark rainy day it is even darker in there. You may have to leave the big door open till you lock them up around dark.
Oh that is a good idea. Thank you! I live in South Central Missouri.
 
I agree coop needs more light and ventilation, while still being kept dry as possible inside. I prefer natural light which is most easily provided by windows, however a light on a timer or even a battery operated light you turn on and off will do if no other option.

Not sure how many birds you have or size of coop but you want to aim for 10% of sq ft or 1 sq ft per bird in ventilation. To deal with wind/rain, I aimed vents away from prevailing winds and used louvered covers facing towards winds. You have a covered run so you can open up quite a bit of the wall facing the run for both light and ventilation, as the roof will naturally provide weather protection.
We have a 10x10 coop and 9 chickens. Plus that top area. Thank you!
 
We have a 10x10 coop and 9 chickens. Plus that top area. Thank you!
The top area is really considered the 'coop' part and the outside caged in area is the 'run'.

Your actually coop might be too small/they might be too crowded in there.

Is there a roosting bar in there?
Did I miss that in the picture?
 
It would help us provide more accurate and useful advice if we knew your location.

Looking at the pictures, I immediately saw the problem. There is no ventilation. Lack of oxygen. That's why they are sleeping outside.
You said you are new to this so you are forgiven for not knowing that chickens don't need warmth, they need fresh air. They are wearing their warmth. They are outdoor animals and oxygen is more important than fresh food and clean water.
You also said they won't go into the warm dry area. But you then said water got into the coop so it was no longer dry.
Chickens can live in trees through rain, snow, wind and cold. Do you know why? Because they have fresh air. I have a hen right now that has been roosting up in a tree for weeks through cold windy rain nights. She shows up every morning to be with the flock.
Had I kept her in a closed up steel building, I wouldn't expect her to last as long as she has in the tree. The last 2 buildings I built have windows covering 1/3 of both east and west walls. Wind down to -19F has been blowing through there for the last 5 years. Never a sniffle out of a bird.
Chickens don't survive winter by being kept warm. A warm place with no cross ventilation quickly gets loaded up with humidity. That is a breeding ground for fungus, viruses, bacteria, frostbite and ammonia. I'd sleep outside too.
You asked what you should do differently.
Cut big windows and cover with hardware cloth if predators can get to the building. Preferably on opposite sides of the coop. East wall is most important if you are in the Northern hemisphere. Ignore the temperature, rain, snow and wind. It won't hurt them unless all your birds are frizzles and seramas.
Wow that was very informative. You used great examples and I read them to my husband. They helped a lot because he did not believe me when I explained the ventilation part. Thank you. We are going to make some immediate changes. I appreciate you! I am in South Central Missouri.
 
It would help us provide more accurate and useful advice if we knew your location.

Looking at the pictures, I immediately saw the problem. There is no ventilation. Lack of oxygen. That's why they are sleeping outside.
You said you are new to this so you are forgiven for not knowing that chickens don't need warmth, they need fresh air. They are wearing their warmth. They are outdoor animals and oxygen is more important than fresh food and clean water.
You also said they won't go into the warm dry area. But you then said water got into the coop so it was no longer dry.
Chickens can live in trees through rain, snow, wind and cold. Do you know why? Because they have fresh air. I have a hen right now that has been roosting up in a tree for weeks through cold windy rain nights. She shows up every morning to be with the flock.
Had I kept her in a closed up steel building, I wouldn't expect her to last as long as she has in the tree. The last 2 buildings I built have windows covering 1/3 of both east and west walls. Wind down to -19F has been blowing through there for the last 5 years. Never a sniffle out of a bird.
Chickens don't survive winter by being kept warm. A warm place with no cross ventilation quickly gets loaded up with humidity. That is a breeding ground for fungus, viruses, bacteria, frostbite and ammonia. I'd sleep outside too.
You asked what you should do differently.
Cut big windows and cover with hardware cloth if predators can get to the building. Preferably on opposite sides of the coop. East wall is most important if you are in the Northern hemisphere. Ignore the temperature, rain, snow and wind. It won't hurt them unless all your birds are frizzles and seramas.
Wow that was very informative. You used great examples and I read them to my husband. They helped a lot because he did not believe me when I explained the ventilation part. Thank you. We are going to make some immediate changes. I appreciate you! I am in South Central Missouri.
 
The top area is really considered the 'coop' part and the outside caged in area is the 'run'.

Your actually coop might be too small/they might be too crowded in there.

Is there a roosting bar in there?
Did I miss that in the picture?
The top area is really considered the 'coop' part and the outside caged in area is the 'run'.

Your actually coop might be too small/they might be too crowded in there.

Is there a roosting bar in there?
Did I miss that in the picture?
 

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