Parking Lot
ADA Parking Lot Compliance in Sherwood, Oregon: 2026 Guide
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
Sherwood pairs a historic Old Town with some of Washington County's fastest suburban growth — new shopping centers, medical offices, and mixed-use development spreading out from the original core. Whether your lot is decades old or freshly paved, it carries the same obligation under the Americans with Disabilities Act: provide accessible parking that works for people who use wheelchairs, walkers, and mobility devices. Oregon adds its own requirements on top of the federal rules.
This guide walks through what ADA compliance looks like for a Sherwood lot in practical terms, so you can find and fix gaps before they become complaints or claims. For the statewide framework, start with our ADA parking lot compliance guide for Oregon.
This is general guidance. Every lot is different, and the only way to confirm your exact obligations is a site-specific survey.
The required number of accessible spaces depends on your total space count, not your square footage. The 2010 ADA Standards set the ratio at one accessible space per 25 total spaces through the first 100, then step the requirement down for larger lots.
| Total Spaces | Required Accessible | Van-Accessible Minimum |
|---|---|---|
| 1–25 | 1 | 1 |
| 26–50 | 2 | 1 |
| 51–75 | 3 | 1 |
| 76–100 | 4 | 1 |
| 101–150 | 5 | 1 |
| 151–200 | 6 | 1 |
Each accessible space has to meet specific geometry:
Sherwood's split between Old Town and new development means a range of conditions. Older lots may carry pre-standard layouts and settled slopes; newer ones were built to current rules but still need verification, since grading can drift as fresh fill settles. A level reading on each accessible space is the only way to be certain.
Every accessible space needs a vertical sign showing the International Symbol of Accessibility, mounted so the bottom is at least 60 inches above the ground. Van spaces add a "Van Accessible" sign. Oregon also requires a sign stating the fine for unauthorized parking in accessible spaces — the Oregon penalty plate you see beneath the symbol across Washington County.
Painted markings count too. The blue symbol in the stall and the hatching in the aisle have to stay legible against Sherwood's wet winters and summer UV. Our ADA parking sign requirements page covers mounting heights and the Oregon plate.
Compliance does not stop at layout. The surface inside accessible spaces, access aisles, and along the route to your door must stay firm, stable, and slip-resistant:
Sherwood's wet Washington County winters and freeze-thaw cycles work water into cracks, freeze it overnight, and widen the damage by spring. Prioritize accessible areas in your seasonal maintenance plan, and inspect them monthly through the rainy season.
Routine maintenance — sealcoating, crack filling, patching, restriping existing lines — does not trigger new ADA obligations. An alteration does. If you fully repave, expand, or regrade your lot, you must bring the path of travel into compliance, spending up to 20 percent of the project cost on accessibility if it is not already accessible. For Sherwood's older Old Town lots, a repave is the ideal moment to correct outdated layouts, widen aisles, and fix slopes in one pass.
The practical path is a documented walk-through followed by a scoped plan — usually some combination of restriping to the correct layout, new or relocated signage, surface repair, and occasionally regrading where slopes exceed 2 percent. Our ADA compliance audit process explains what a thorough review covers. When you are ready to repaint to a compliant layout, our parking lot striping in Sherwood page covers local restriping.
Understand what happens during an ADA parking compliance audit, common violations found in Oregon commercial lots, and how to prepare your property.
Complete guide to ADA parking requirements in Oregon, including space dimensions, van accessible standards, signage rules, and ORS 447.233 specifics for commercial property owners.
See real before-and-after results of commercial sealcoating projects in Oregon and learn how this affordable maintenance extends parking lot life by a decade or more.
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