Oh, boy, now for some antidote to that clean and nice stuff
This is my hutch setup, each picture shows one complex made up by connected hutches, this is inside the protective fence. The rabbits have to spend the night in there, but have free roam of about 200-2000m² during the day, depending on if I'm around.
Over here wire cages are a NoGo, something that spilled over from freeing laying chickens from wire cages, wire=bad now. Anyway, couldn't get proper wire floors anyway, so I use wood slat floors. I learn with every hutch I build, but I think the versions with the mortar throughs underneith are getting pretty close to optimal. Lots of details that evolved over several iterations. Hutches need to be raised since this is potential flood land anyway. There are levels and hidey houses inside the hutches, and they are connected via tunnels.
The pictures were taken way after the last cleaning, they get way more forage and hay than they can eat and they waste a lot, for weeks I just pull that out and and pile it up until it eventually goes to the vegetable plot or compost heap. No point in critisizing that shedule, no point in making things more complicated when there is no problem. I might be lucky with the local climate, coccidiosis is practically unheard of here, for example.
The darker picture are the older hutches built into the side of the barn, old design, two levels (connected) with pans underneith each. When I need to seperate those hutches there is a foldable ramp stored away at the right center of the picture, right now two 6mo old bucklings live up there and get in and out via this ramp. (My two retired, 8 and 10yo does in the lower hutch)
I reckon this doesn't look appealing to a lot of pet rabbit folk, but as been said, they spend most of the day outdoors anyway. And my rabbits definitly like their hutches.