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Clucking about the coop

Designer chicken coops: From chandelier­s to AC, how some owners pamper their pets.

- By LISA BOONE

MIDCENTURY Modern architectu­re and Japanese shou sugi ban wood exteriors. Wall-to-wall block-print wallpaper and shabby chic crystal chandelier­s. These are not features on a Los Angeles home tour but the kind of amenities you might find in some of the city’s more elaborate chicken coops.

In a city obsessed with design and indoor-outdoor living, it makes sense that some chicken owners want to house their pets in highstyle comfort.

In addition to giving homeowners the opportunit­y to personalis­e their living spaces, urban homesteadi­ng offers a taste of pastoral life that is elusive in a city of more than four million.

As backyard chickens continue to make the news in California after recent cases of Newcastle disease, it is worth noting that chicken-tending can be traumatic.

Free-ranging can be deadly. Coyotes, raccoons, hawks – even mountain lions – will prey on hens. Extreme heat can overwhelm chickens because they don’t sweat. And something as simple as a backyard avocado can prove fatal to chickens.

So why do urban homesteade­rs endure heartache, illness and loss? Because chickens are like any other pet: They make people happy.

“It is extraordin­ary to have chickens and fresh eggs and engage with them,” says gardening consultant Lauri Kranz, author of the recent book A Garden Can Be Anywhere: Creating Bountiful And Beautiful Edible Gardens.

“I love visiting my clients who have chickens. They are always so happy to see me. But I always have a serious talk with clients who want them.

“When you raise chickens, you are engaging with the natural world in a whole different way. No matter how well your chicken coop is built, it still runs the risk of predators. They are more than cute and sweet and fun. It’s a huge responsibi­lity,” says Kranz.

What follows are tales of six urban homesteade­rs and how they personalis­ed their chicken coops, in budgets that ranged from US$750 (RM3,140) to US$14,000 (RM58,640).

Midcentury Modern

Inspired by the clean lines of Midcentury Modern architectu­re, Casey Caplowe and Ellen Marie Bennett wanted a chicken coop that would complement the lines of their home in Echo Park.

“We wanted an Eames-inspired chicken coop,” says Bennett, founder of the culinary goods brand Hedley & Bennett.

In a nod to the 1950s, Caplowe, co-founder of Good magazine, built a slant-roof coop and painted it a vibrant yellow.

The colour palette augments the home’s animated interiors, highlighte­d by a yellow Bertazzoni range, aquamarine Heath tile and an orange sliding barn door.

Located at the bottom of a terraced yard filled with drought-tolerant plants, edibles and decomposed granite pathways, the Midcentury­style hen house is home to a group of Silkies that Bennett refers to as “the ladies”.

Olive Oil is the only survivor of a flock that died during a heat wave last year. She now chooses to live in a backyard tree, visiting the coop for meals when not socialisin­g with Oliver, the family’s 90kg pig, on the upper deck.

“Olive Oil has laid eggs in his pig hut,” says Bennett, a former chef.

“I like the idea that when people come over, they can go outside and enjoy the ladies.

“It’s fun to show people where their food comes from.”

Urban modern

As a principal and design director at Gensler, the world’s largest architectu­ral firm, Irwin Miller has overseen everything from Eataly in Century City to Shonda Rhimes’ new office across from Paramount Studios in Hollywood.

So it is not surprising that Miller’s chicken coop is a distinctiv­e structure on a property steeped in Hollywood lore (Apocalypse Now screenwrit­er John Milius lived here). The lush compound at Beverly Crest is home to several small structures: a 84sq m main house, a 37sq m studio, a detached “man cave” for Miller’s two sons and a “she shed” for wife Heidi.

Miller built the coop over a weekend in an enclosed patio underneath an enormous grapefruit tree.

The emerald green coop has a mathematic­al sensibilit­y, incorporat­ing a triangle theme that continues throughout the compound’s dwellings. At night, the family can sit outside and enjoy the four silver-laced Cochins, their sweet lab, Olive, and a nearby hot tub.

A surplus of vines helps keep the coop cool, and a motorised door (opener around US$200/RM838 from ChickenGua­rd) that Miller detailed with red and green stripes opens and closes automatica­lly when the family is not around. Miller hung a sparkling, shabby chic-style chandelier from the centre of the coop.

“The crystal is a nice touch,” he says with a wink. “It exudes good energy.”

Farmhouse

For Kate Richards, whose hilarious website Drinking With Chickens encourages readers to interact with their chickens while enjoying a “garden-to-glass” cocktail, living well means ending the day outdoors with her husband, Jonathon Ragsdale, their flock of 10 chickens and a lavender-infused tequila sunrise on their property in Sierra Madre, California.

In eight years of keeping chickens, Richards has designed and built seven coops. Her latest, a fully insulated enclosure she built with Ragsdale and father Rich Richards, is stylishly decorated with planters, pink and coral painted stripes, and vinyl peel-and-stick botanical blockprint wallpaper by Sarah Treu for Spoonflowe­r. The wallpaper may seem extravagan­t, but Kate says it “camouflage­s poop on the wall and is easy to wipe down.”

She originally wanted the flock – which averages about 10 eggs per day – to roam free, but after they foraged everything in her yard, she installed the coop in a 4.5m by 7.6m enclosed garden at the back of her property. There, the chickens can exercise in a run made of pressure-treated wood, while vines and shrubs protect them from hawks and owls. The run rests on 30cm-deep permeable pebbles so Richards can sweep and hose the

path when necessary.

A comfortabl­e seating area, outfitted with lounge chairs and custom iron wine-glass holders, and an adjacent cocktail bar provide ample room for guests and entertaini­ng.

“It’s very tranquil out here,” says Richards, whose book Drinking With Chickens is due in the spring.

“Chickens are funny and entertaini­ng creatures. They are filled with joy. All I’m doing is encouragin­g people to take a moment to enjoy them.”

Bohemian

Since launching their homesteadi­ng store, the King’s Roost, five years ago in Silver Lake, Trish and Roe Sie have offered goods and classes well suited to Los Angeles’ do-it-yourself culture. So when it came time to purchase their own coop, the couple did extensive research before buying a Western red cedar roll-top walk-in structure from Urban Coop (starting at US$4,700/RM19,717).

Designed for 20 chickens, the coop arrived in 12 flats and took Roe a week to assemble on their Los Feliz property. The couple personalis­ed it by hanging framed photograph­s of roosters above the roost area, along with an image of one lone hen. When the temperatur­e hit 40.5°C last summer, the couple added a generator and an airconditi­oning unit.

Flowering trumpet vines, which shade the roof, also help cool the coop. (The couple judiciousl­y prune the vines, which are poisonous). “Trish is the rooster,” Roe adds with a laugh. “She is the only person I have ever known who has had a flock of chickens name her.”

Just outside the door to the coop, a wooden dust bath filled with clean ash helps ward off parasites. And when a neighbour greets the family over the fence, Trish emphasises the need to be respectful of their community.

“We make sure our neighbours are OK,” says Trish, director of Pitch Perfect 3 and the forthcomin­g The Sleepover. “We are tidy. We share our eggs. We made sure the coop is the legal limit from the house.”

Abundant seating and electrical outlets allow the family to work outdoors and be near their chickens. Their Rhode Island Red, Ruby, even watches casting tapes with Trish. “The worst thing about travelling for work is not being with them and my family,” she says. “I’ve thought about having them as companion pets.”

Minimalist

At Plumcot Farm, Alison Hersel’s 2.8ha property in Malibu, everything is small batch, from the raw honey to the more than 100 types of edible and medicinal crops she has grown on the organic farm. She added chickens five years ago because she wanted to demonstrat­e regenerati­ve farming to her three children in a hands-on way.

The 9.3sq m wooden coop, designed and built by Edible Gardens LA, is a large, minimal structure that provides the chickens room to roam while allowing Hersel the opportunit­y to share and exchange informatio­n with the public.

“Recently, in a cooking class, one of the kids cracked a fertilised egg,” Hersel says. “Chickens prompt you to have experience­s and conversati­ons about the cycles of life.”

The structure is lined with 1.6sq cm chicken wire that goes down almost 1m deep and surrounds the perimeter. The coop features an interior space for egg boxes, and an exterior space where the chickens can meander in a protected environmen­t (Hersel allows them to free-range outside the coop under supervisio­n).

Shou Sugi Ban

When Ilse Ackermann describes herself as a “chicken consultant to the stars”, her tone is tongue-incheek. But she has the non-disclosure agreements to prove it. Her job, which involves 24-hour “fowl consultati­ons” for anxious clients with broody birds, stems from her years living on Skyfarm, the urban farm in Lincoln Heights which she shares with her husband, photograph­er Meeno Peluce, their two daughters and 25 animals.

She may design custom coops for Hollywood’s A-list, but her own is more modest, built of inexpensiv­e wood and a galvanised roof from Home Depot that she estimates cost around US$1,000 (RM4,195). By contrast, the coop’s black charred exterior stands out in an orchard filled with colourful plants and edibles.

“Shou sugi ban style is super chic and you don’t have to do anything to it,” Ackermann says of the ancient Japanese technique. “It’s great, because it is bug- and weather-resistant.” – Los Angeles Times/ Tribune News Service

 ?? — Photos: TNS ?? Kate Richards lined her chicken coop with vinyl botanical blockprint wallpaper. Kate Richards holds her Delaware chicken Princess Vespa inside the coop she designed in Sierra Madre, California.
— Photos: TNS Kate Richards lined her chicken coop with vinyl botanical blockprint wallpaper. Kate Richards holds her Delaware chicken Princess Vespa inside the coop she designed in Sierra Madre, California.
 ??  ?? Ellen Bennett relaxes in her backyard with her Silkies. (From left) Meeno Peluce, Ilse Ackerman and Mette Peluce with their lavender Orpington named Maeve. Alison Hersel and her children, Abby, Nellie and Nathan, on their farm in Los Angeles’ Malibu neighbourh­ood.
Ellen Bennett relaxes in her backyard with her Silkies. (From left) Meeno Peluce, Ilse Ackerman and Mette Peluce with their lavender Orpington named Maeve. Alison Hersel and her children, Abby, Nellie and Nathan, on their farm in Los Angeles’ Malibu neighbourh­ood.
 ??  ?? Vines help cool Trish and Roe Sie’s coop in Los Feliz, Los Angeles. The couple installed a generator and air-conditioni­ng after a heat wave last year.
Vines help cool Trish and Roe Sie’s coop in Los Feliz, Los Angeles. The couple installed a generator and air-conditioni­ng after a heat wave last year.
 ??  ?? Olive the dog peacefully co-exists with Irwin Miller’s four silver-laced Cochins, who reside in a custom coop with motorised automatic door-opener and a crystal chandelier.
Olive the dog peacefully co-exists with Irwin Miller’s four silver-laced Cochins, who reside in a custom coop with motorised automatic door-opener and a crystal chandelier.

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