Parking Lot
ADA Parking Striping in Talent, Oregon: Bringing Your Lot Up to Code
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
Talent has seen a wave of rebuilding across its commercial core, and fresh asphalt is everywhere along Highway 99 and Talent Avenue. New and resurfaced lots are the ideal moment to get accessibility right the first time — but plenty of older lots in the Rogue Valley city still carry faded, pre-standard striping that needs to be brought up to code. Either way, the restripe is where accessible layout gets locked in.
When the old lines are gone, you can correct an undersized accessible stall, widen a too-narrow aisle, and reposition signs in a single pass instead of paying twice. This guide covers what an ADA-compliant restripe involves in Talent. For the statewide rules behind it, see our ADA parking compliance guide for Oregon.
Verify how many accessible stalls your lot owes before painting. Under the 2010 ADA Standards, the count scales with total spaces: 1 accessible stall for 1 to 25 spaces, 2 for 26 to 50, 3 for 51 to 75, 4 for 76 to 100, and one more per additional 50 spaces. At least one of every six accessible stalls (rounded up) must be van-accessible, so a small Talent lot's single accessible stall must be van-accessible.
Oregon's accessible parking law, ORS 447.233, adds signage and marking detail beyond the federal floor, so design against both. Our 2026 ADA striping requirements page covers the current marking standards.
On a rebuild, lay out to current standards from the start. On an older lot, do not simply trace the existing, possibly non-compliant layout:
Adjacent accessible stalls can share one aisle between them. Our ADA access aisle striping spec details the hatch pattern, aisle width, and shared-aisle rules.
Paint the International Symbol of Accessibility — white on a blue field — centered in each accessible stall and sized to stay visible when a vehicle is parked. Blue stall borders are common Oregon practice. For paint, standard water-based traffic latex is the usual choice; the Rogue Valley's intense summer UV and freeze-thaw winters favor a durable formulation, and thermoplastic lasts longer where budget allows.
Striping is only part of the job. Each accessible stall needs a vertical sign with the accessibility symbol mounted at least 60 inches from the ground to the bottom of the sign, positioned to stay visible when a vehicle is parked. Van stalls add a "Van Accessible" plate, and Oregon requires a supplemental fine-amount sign. Install or verify these posts while crews and equipment are on site to avoid a separate trip.
On a fresh rebuild, the surface is ready for paint. On an older lot, paint will not bond to a dirty, oil-stained, or crumbling surface, and a deteriorated accessible stall is itself a violation. Before restriping:
Sealcoating an older lot before the restripe gives a smooth, dark surface that holds paint longer and makes the markings pop.
The Rogue Valley's striping season runs from late spring through early fall, when temperatures stay above 50°F and rain is unlikely. The valley's warm, dry summers offer excellent curing conditions. Book ahead of the summer rush, especially if your restripe is tied to a larger paving or rebuild project. For local pricing and timing, see our parking lot striping in Talent guide.
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.
Have a question about this topic? We'll respond within 24 hours.