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A Smart Home Comes to Roost for Backyard Chickens Inside The COOP

03.27.23 | By
A Smart Home Comes to Roost for Backyard Chickens Inside The COOP

Bould Design’s portfolio of work includes some easily recognizable designs from the tech category, including the sleek Eero mesh wi-fi system, the petite and purple embellished Roku streaming media player, and perhaps one of the most popularly adopted smart home devices ever, the Nest Learning Thermostat. Few would guess the design studio’s next project would be a smart home… not for people, but for housing our fine feathered friends.

The COOP shown with both side doors open to illustrate ease of access for collecting eggs and cleaning the interior of the chicken coop.

The Austin-based start-up’s chicken dwelling The COOP is a backyard coop for suburban dwellers seeking a stylish and safe housing solution for pet chickens. Sharing many of the architectural hallmarks of a modern pre-fab structure intended for humans, including clerestory windows below its pitch roof design and a colorful front door, it presents itself as the ultimate ADU for chickens.

An easily accessible lid allows for eggs to be collected without ruffling too many feathers, while two swing doors on the side makes clean-up maintenance equally simple.

To ensure the occupants remain safe and sound, Bould Design and COOP made their modern coop with double-walled recyclable plastic, manufacturing using the same rotational molding technique that imparts YETI coolers with their storied durability and insulation.

Interior 1080p webcam monitoring nesting area and roost inside The COOP.

Beyond its smart looking design the miniature home is equipped with an IoT camera which allows poulterers to check on their feathered flock both inside and out remotely by app. The Run & Roost cams are engineered with many of the same smart security cameras humans use to monitor their homes – 1080p resolution, event recording, night vision, and motion alerts – while also giving owners the option to peer in to check-in on their pets and their eggs at any hour.

Chicken leaving The Coop from the red front door.

Screen capture of The COOP's iPhone notifications reporting motion detection and the front door opening

And being a smart home, of course there’s a compatible app that offers monitoring, notifications, and also the option to schedule the remote control front door to open and close over the span of the day.

Render of COOP chicken coop simulated with chicken to show scale and metal mesh enclosure.

The side doors are designed to permit easy access to collect newly laid eggs without overly disturbing The COOP’s peckish occupants, with a heavy-duty steel weld mesh walk-in run adding an extra layer of security from predators.

We’d be quick to admit we are not well acquainted with the rates within the housing market for chickens, but the nearly $2,000 price tag attached to The COOP’s 28 square feet is not insignificant. Mind you, the interior can accommodate up to six lodgers at once, includes integrated feeding and watering stations, and features two areas for hens to comfortably nest. In any case, the chickens who come to roost in The COOP should consider themselves particularly fortunate to call such elevated architecture home.

Gregory Han is a Senior Editor at Design Milk. A Los Angeles native with a profound love and curiosity for design, hiking, tide pools, and road trips, a selection of his adventures and musings can be found at gregoryhan.com.