Parking Lot
Bollard Installation in Beaverton, Oregon
Cojo
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Beaverton bollard demand is heavy and concentrated. Three corridors drive the calls: the Cedar Hills Crossing and Beaverton Town Square retail strips, the Highway 217 office and tech corridor, and the Murray Boulevard EV charging build-out. Cojo serves all of Beaverton from the I-5 corridor base. This page lays out what installation looks like in the city, what local code requires, and what to expect on price and lead time.
A standard 6-inch concrete-filled steel pipe bollard installed in Beaverton takes 4 to 6 hours per unit, requires a 24 to 36 inch concrete footing, and runs $400 to $1,200 installed. The City of Beaverton enforces site-improvement standards through the Beaverton Development Code, ADA scoping through the Building Codes Division, and right-of-way work through the Public Works Operations Center. Most Beaverton sites sit on Willamette silty clay, with pockets of fill near Beaverton Creek and Fanno Creek requiring deeper footings.
The City of Beaverton has adopted the Oregon Structural Specialty Code (which incorporates the IBC and the federal ADA Standards) and enforces site improvements through the Beaverton Development Code (BDC) Chapters 60 and 70. Right-of-way work along Cedar Hills Boulevard, Murray Boulevard, and the ODOT-jurisdiction sections of Highway 217 requires ODOT design conformance (ODOT Design Manual). For Highway 217 project work, ODOT also enforces clear-zone setbacks beyond city standards.
Most Beaverton sites sit on Willamette silty clay loam with pockets of engineered fill near the Beaverton Creek and Fanno Creek drainages. Two notes:
Freeze-thaw cycles run 25 to 35 per Beaverton winter -- enough that air-entrained concrete is mandatory in our spec.
In January 2026 we installed 4 stainless steel decorative bollards (304 alloy, 6-inch outer diameter, 36 inches above grade) at a 14,000 square foot Beaverton retail center near Cedar Hills Boulevard. The owner specified stainless for facade aesthetic match. Footings ran 36 inches with grade-rated anchor cages. Each bollard was hand-finished and field-welded into final position. Field time: 1.5 days, 2-person crew. The same job included 2 vehicle-strike protection bollards at a paired Level 3 EV charging cabinet -- see our EV charging bollards reference for the EV-specific spec rationale.
Industry Baseline Range
| Bollard Type | Installed Price (each) |
|---|---|
| 4-inch steel pipe, surface-mount | $300 to $700 |
| 6-inch concrete-filled steel pipe, embedded | $400 to $1,200 |
| Stainless steel decorative | $1,200 to $2,800 |
| Removable bollard with sleeve | $700 to $1,800 |
| EV charging protection (pair, installed) | $900 to $2,400 |
| ASTM F2656 K4 crash-rated | $1,500 to $4,000 |
| ASTM F2656 K12 crash-rated | $4,500 to $10,000 |
Beaverton 2026 pricing runs above the regional baseline because Cedar Hills and Highway 217 corridor jobs require traffic-control plans, after-hours scheduling at most retail centers, and tighter ADA enforcement during plan review. Stainless and decorative work has run high through 2026 because Asian-supply lead times stretched on 304 and 316 stock. Lead time on stock steel: 2 to 3 weeks. Stainless: 4 to 6 weeks. Crash-rated certified: 6 to 10 weeks.
For full pricing breakdowns and product comparisons, see our storefront bollards and best security bollards references.
Beaverton bollard installs frequently come bundled with re-striping work. New stall geometry typically follows a bollard install at the storefront edge. See commercial striping in Beaverton for that scope, and the Portland metro bollards page if you operate multiple Portland-area sites.
Cojo handles bollard installation across Beaverton, Aloha, Bethany, and the Highway 217 corridor. Every quote comes with a written ADA compliance review. Contact Cojo for a site walk; Beaverton-area bollard work usually pairs with the rest of our parking lot services on the same crew day.
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.
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