Parking Lot
ADA Parking Striping in Tigard, Oregon: Bringing Your Lot Up to Code
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
When the accessible symbol in a Tigard parking lot has faded to a faint outline, or an access aisle has worn to a few pale lines, the lot is out of code — even if nothing about the layout has changed. Restriping is the fastest, lowest-cost way to bring a Washington County lot back into compliance, and for most properties along Pacific Highway (99W), Scholls Ferry Road, or near Washington Square it is the only work required. This guide covers what an ADA-compliant restripe includes, what the paint must deliver, and how the high-traffic valley setting shapes the timing.
A restripe is not a full compliance overhaul. It refreshes and corrects the markings on a lot whose underlying layout, counts, and grades are sound. If your lot is also short on accessible stalls or has slope problems, those are separate fixes, covered in our ADA parking compliance guide for Oregon.
A compliant ADA restripe answers to the 2010 ADA Standards and Oregon's ORS 447.233. Each element below has to be right.
Each accessible stall must be striped to at least 8 feet wide. The International Symbol of Accessibility is painted in the stall, usually white on a blue field, centered so it reads to drivers and isn't blocked by a vehicle overhang. Faded or partial symbols are non-compliant, so a restripe repaints them at full opacity.
The aisle beside each stall is striped with diagonal hatching and a NO PARKING legend so no one blocks the space a wheelchair user needs to deploy a lift or ramp. Standard stalls take a 5-foot aisle; van stalls take an 8-foot aisle (or the 11-foot-stall-plus-5-foot-aisle alternative). Our ADA access aisle striping spec details the hatch spacing, legend, and shared-aisle rules.
At least one in every six accessible stalls must be van-accessible, marked with the wider aisle and a "Van Accessible" sign. A restripe is the moment to confirm your van count and widen an aisle if the lot was striped under older ratios — important in the big metro retail lots where the van count steps up.
Before paint touches asphalt, a careful contractor confirms the existing layout still meets the standards — stall widths, aisle widths, the count, and the slope. Restriping over a non-compliant layout just repaints the violation. The full 2026 checklist is in our ADA striping requirements for 2026.
Tigard sits in the wet western valley, where a long rainy season and steady UV fade traffic paint — and the sheer volume of a Washington Square-area lot wears markings down even faster than the climate alone would. Standard water-based latex is the common, economical choice, but high-traffic retail lots in Tigard often step up to a higher-durability paint or add reflective glass beads for rainy-night visibility, both to extend the interval between restripes and to keep the accessible markings legible under constant tire wear. Whatever the product, the blue and white must stay sharp and high-contrast, because a faded symbol invites a complaint.
Timing is the other constraint. Traffic paint needs dry pavement and temperatures comfortably above 50°F, which in Tigard means a striping window running roughly late spring through early fall. Busy retail lots often schedule restriping for early mornings or off-peak days to keep stalls open during business hours. Summer slots fill fast, so booking ahead secures both the dates and the dry conditions.
If your Tigard lot has a sound, compliant layout and just needs fresh, code-correct markings, a restripe follows the existing lines and corrects the accessible elements — the fast, economical path. If the lot was never professionally laid out for ADA, or an audit found the count, aisle widths, or slopes out of tolerance, a new layout is the better investment. A new layout includes measuring, planning, and chalk-lining before paint, and it is the chance to maximize stall count while guaranteeing compliance. General striping pricing for the area is on our parking lot striping in Tigard page.
If you are sealcoating, stripe after the sealcoat cures, not before. A fresh, dark surface gives the accessible markings better adhesion and far stronger contrast — the blue and white pop against clean black asphalt, which matters in the valley's gray, rainy light. Restriping a lot you sealcoated last season is also a natural moment to bring the accessible layout fully up to code in one visit.
An ADA restripe is precise work. The dimensions, the symbol placement, the aisle hatching, and the van designation all have to meet the standard — a lot that looks freshly painted but misses a measurement is still non-compliant. Cojo Excavation & Asphalt restripes Tigard and Washington County lots to a code-correct ADA layout, verifying the count, widths, and slopes before the paint goes down. See our professional striping services for the full scope.
The specifications here are general guidance under the 2010 ADA Standards and ORS 447.233 — a site survey confirms what your lot needs. Request a free quote and we will assess your Tigard lot and stripe it to code.
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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