Parking Lot
Bank Credit Union Parking Lot Striping in Sisters, Oregon: 2026 Service Guide
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
A bank or credit union lot is half parking, half traffic engineering. The drive-thru teller lanes and ATM stack carry as many cars as the stalls, and if those lanes aren't striped to hold a queue, the lot snarls at lunch and on Fridays. In Sisters, the local branches and credit unions along Cascade Avenue and near the Highway 20 corridor serve a tight Deschutes County membership plus the seasonal traffic the Western-theme tourism brings. The striping has to keep the lanes flowing and the security-sensitive zones clear, through a real mountain winter.
Cojo Excavation & Asphalt stripes bank and credit-union lots for Sisters operators on trips east over the Cascades from our valley base. Financial lots add a wrinkle most commercial work doesn't: armored-car service stalls, night-deposit access, and camera sightlines all have to stay clear and marked. And at this elevation, the paint has to survive snow, plowing, and freeze-thaw between repaints.
The markings on a bank or credit-union lot manage drive-up lanes, security zones, and member parking.
Drive-thru teller and ATM stacking lanes. The teller lanes and ATM approach have to be striped to hold a line of cars without backing into the through-lane. Clear lane lines and arrows keep the queue orderly at the busy windows.
ADA lobby path. Accessible spaces near the lobby with a marked, continuous route serve members with mobility limits. Oregon enforces specific rules on accessible spaces, aisles, and routes.
Night-deposit short-stay. A marked short-stay stall near the night-deposit box lets a business owner drop a deposit quickly and safely after hours without blocking traffic.
Armored-car service stall keep-clear. The armored-car pickup needs a marked keep-clear area so the service runs on schedule and stays out of member traffic. Faded keep-clear striping here is a security and safety gap.
Member 15-minute stalls. Short-stay stalls near the door keep quick transactions cycling so members aren't circling.
ADA and security-camera sightline striping. Lane and stall layout should keep the camera sightlines clear so security coverage isn't blocked by a poorly placed row.
Cost depends on lot size, surface condition, paint type, and how much drive-lane, ADA, and security-zone work the layout needs. The figures below are industry baseline ranges from national contractor data. Actual Sisters costs frequently run above baseline because of the lane and keep-clear work and the haul distance over the pass.
Industry baseline ranges. Actual costs vary with surface condition, layout complexity, ADA scope, and current market conditions.
| Service | Industry Baseline Range |
|---|---|
| Per-space restripe (existing layout) | $3–$6 per space |
| 100-space restripe | $550–$1,000 |
| New layout / full redesign (100 spaces) | $900–$1,500 |
| ADA-compliant space (complete) | $200–$350 each |
| Drive-thru / ATM lane striping | varies by length |
| Directional arrows | $25–$50 each |
| Keep-clear / stacking stencils | $30–$75 each |
| Curb painting (per linear foot) | $0.30–$0.65 |
Sisters' altitude drives the wear and the schedule. The drive-thru and ATM lanes see concentrated tire traffic that fades paint fast, and winter snow, plowing, and freeze-thaw speed it up, so surface prep and crack treatment matter more before striping. The dry high-desert summer gives a fast cure, but the working window is short and books up.
Because the keep-clear zones and ADA route are markings you cannot let fade, Sisters branches often refresh them on a tighter cycle than the stalls. A sealcoat under the striping protects the asphalt from freeze-thaw and gives the lanes and keep-clear zones the high contrast that keeps them readable under snow glare and low winter light.
A well-striped bank lot moves drive-up traffic without jams, keeps the security-sensitive zones clear, and keeps the lobby accessible. For the operator, that means smoother peak periods, reliable armored-car and night-deposit access, and a lot that signals a well-run branch. The striping is a small cost against the friction a snarled or faded lot creates for members.
If you run a Sisters bank or credit-union lot along Cascade Avenue or near the Highway 20 corridor, start with a site walk. We measure the lot, check the drive lanes and keep-clear zones for wear, review the ADA route against current standards, and quote against real conditions. We back the work with our professional striping services, and you can view our work first. Related local work is in our parking lot striping in Sisters overview.
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