It has an optional extra 3 metre run, plus another 1 metre optional at extra cost, for 'up to 12 hens' (!!!!) How you would get into the run to clean up, or to catch a hen, takes some imagination. And I don't know why they claim it's the 'most predator-proof coop on the market.' You have to padlock the door to make it secure and the pophole just slides down, apparently with no locking mechanism. If it was up on legs, so the hens could use the space underneath for shelter and shade, it would be better. Interior nestbox (only one, for 8-12 birds) takes up quite a bit of the space. Feeder and drinker inside a coop which is dark enough to encourage laying is quite wrong, inaccessible, some hens would be bullied off them, and anyway you'd need two of each or much larger ones, for 8-12 hens. If you watch the video, you can see the lack of ventilation - leaving the air gap in the roof during the day would let in light right over the nestbox, and rain if there was a sudden shower. Hard on the back, to have to bend down into the space to clean out, and difficult to clean into the corners. Possibility of redmite under the hollow floor and between the overlap along the door flap and the rest of the side panel, also around wooden perch ends. It doesn't say how the perches are removed for checking and cleaning, or indeed how the panels are held together or how easy it is to dismantle the coop.
Nice colour plastic, though, for camouflage in the garden. Personally I don't really like the brightly coloured plastic options, though my green and black Green Frog is very nice.