joz
Garden Ornament
A BUILDING INSPECTOR demanded you use OSB? Over Plywood? Like, a city inspector? Feh. Idiot. (the inspector, not you) OSB is just glorified chipboard. Friends don't let friends build with chipboard. Or, lately, MDF. Anything particulate like that, relying on glue for integrity, will soak water like a sponge and fail spectacularly.bluelacedredhead said:.... Plywood, although more expensive lasts years beyond what OSB does. Learned this the hard way when the Building Inspector demanded that we use OSB for the walls and floor on an extension. A couple of years later, I fell through the floor where it had rotted from water and chicken litter. Then the walls began to disintegrate. The older part of the building with plywood was still in great condition some 20 years after being built.
Insulation prevents thermal transfer. In winter, your chickens will produce enough heat inside to warm the space, and the insulation prevents that heat from escaping (temps move from warm to cold). In summer, unless you've a wee air conditioner, the insulation may prevent the transfer of heat from the sun on the structure through the wall/roof (tho I think in that case radiant barrier might function better), but the air inside won't necessarily be any cooler than the air outside, particularly if you've got sufficient ventilation and airflow. I believe you might actually risk retaining the heat overnight that will build up inside during the day, if you close the coop at night and reduce the airflow.
In such case, providing a little ventilation near the bottom of the coop, near the ground in a shaded area (like a basement or crawlspace.... areas that stay cool since the thermal mass within it doesn't get heated up during the day) will encourage passive cooling..... Major ventilation zones at the top allows the heat an escape, the minor ventilation at the bottom allows for cool replacement air (think of a vacuum... the warm air that has risen won't necessarily vent out the top without air to replace it). Attic fans work on this principle, but assist with power: crack the windows in the evening at the opposite end of the house from the fan, turn the fan on; all the hot air at the ceiling is sucked out, and the cool evening air is sucked in.
Point being... insulation will not cool off a space. It may keep a cool space cooler than the outside, but after a day or so they will equalize if no effort is made to differentiate the temps.
Am I making sense?
As cold hardy as chickens are, I don't think 20* winters are worth the hassle of installing insulation and designing a cooling system.