Parking Lot
ADA Parking Striping in Silverton, Oregon: Bringing Your Lot Up to Code
Cojo
May 30, 2026
6 min read
A restripe is the best chance a Silverton property owner gets to fix accessibility problems. Faded paint is the visible reason to repaint, but underneath it many lots in this Marion County foothill town carry layout issues that have been there since the asphalt was first marked — too few accessible spaces, narrow aisles, missing van dimensions, or signage that never met Oregon's standard. Repainting over the same lines just preserves those problems for another paint cycle.
This guide is for Silverton owners and managers who want the restripe done to current ADA layout, not merely restored to what was there before. For the statewide foundation, see our ADA parking compliance guide for Oregon.
ADA accessible stalls are not standard stalls painted blue. The dimensions are specific:
Silverton's historic downtown lots frequently restripe a row of accessible stalls without a single van-accessible space, or share a too-narrow aisle between two stalls. Before any paint goes down, the layout should be chalked and verified against the 2026 ADA striping requirements for Oregon. On foothill lots, the chalk stage is also when you confirm the chosen stalls actually sit on ground within the 2 percent slope limit — a stall that meets every striping rule but sits on a 4 percent grade is still non-compliant.
The access aisle beside each accessible stall must be striped, not left blank. It needs diagonal hatching across its full length so drivers know not to park there, and many jurisdictions expect "NO PARKING" lettering inside the aisle. The aisle must sit level with the stall and connect to a marked accessible route to the entrance.
When two accessible stalls share one aisle, that shared aisle must still meet the full width requirement. Our ADA access aisle striping spec covers hatch spacing, lettering, and shared-aisle rules.
Each accessible stall gets the International Symbol of Accessibility painted on the pavement, typically white on a blue field, in the correct proportion and orientation. A freehand or undersized symbol invites a complaint. Paint quality matters in Silverton because wet foothill winters and strong summer UV fade markings faster than owners expect; a symbol faded to half visibility is treated as a compliance gap.
Striping pairs with signage. Each stall needs a vertical sign with the accessibility symbol mounted at least 60 inches to the bottom, a "Van Accessible" plate on van stalls, and Oregon's supplemental fine-amount plate. A restripe that leaves old, low, or missing signs in place is only half finished.
Striping needs dry pavement and temperatures above 50°F to cure properly, which in Silverton's foothill climate means late spring through early fall, after the wet season clears. Restriping right after a fresh sealcoat gives the new paint better adhesion and contrast — and hands you a blank slate to correct the entire accessible layout at once instead of tracing old lines. Tourism-heavy lots fill in summer, so scheduling in spring secures availability before the visitor season peaks.
For general lot striping in the area — drive aisles, fire lanes, standard stalls, curb paint — see parking lot striping in Silverton. This article covers general ADA layout guidance; an on-site measurement is the only way to confirm your specific stalls comply.
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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