Bollards
Bollard Installation in Portland, Oregon: Cojo's 2026 Service Guide
Cojo
May 7, 2026
6 min read
Cojo installs bollards across Portland, Oregon for storefront protection, fire-lane channelization, K-rated security perimeters, and decorative architectural facades. Portland's Title 33 zoning and Title 24 building code shape how bollard projects move through the permit process, and the city's downtown / mixed-use / industrial mix means a single contractor often spans cast-concrete decorative work in the Pearl District and ASTM F2656-rated bollards on industrial perimeters in the same week. Cojo set 14 storefront bollards on a multi-tenant retail center near 82nd and Powell in February 2026 -- a project that combined fire-lane bollards, customer-entry decorative bollards, and an ATM enclosure -- and that case is representative of what Portland bollard work looks like.
For category context, see our What Are Bollards hub. For the broader install reference, see Bollard Installation. For storefront-specific specs, see Best Storefront Bollards. For broader Portland service-side context, see our paving contractor Portland Oregon guide.
Cojo's Portland-area bollard services cover the full range:
Portland regulates bollard installation through several code chapters, all administered by the City of Portland Bureau of Development Services.
Title 24 incorporates the Oregon Building Code, which is based on the International Building Code. Permanent bollard installations on commercial property typically require a building permit. Permit fees in 2026 run $300 to $1,200 depending on bollard count and project complexity.
Title 33 covers zoning restrictions that may affect bollard placement, including pedestrian-zone requirements in central city districts and historic-district preservation rules in areas like the Pearl District and Old Town.
The Portland Fire and Rescue Bureau requires fire-access lanes to remain unobstructed but allows controllable barriers (removable or lockable bollards) where access can be guaranteed via Knox-Box keys or matched master keys. Fire marshal review is part of the permit process for any bollard project that affects fire-access pathways.
Cojo handles bollard projects across the Portland metro area, including:
For Salem-area work, see our sibling Bollard Installation Salem guide.
Three representative Cojo Portland projects from the past year:
14 bollards combined storefront protection, fire-lane channelization, and ATM enclosure on a single property. We used 6-inch Schedule 40 concrete-filled steel pipe bollards for the storefront and ATM zones, and removable lockable bollards for the fire-access lane. Total install was three working days plus 72-hour cure before reopening.
24 weathered yellow utility bollards refreshed with cast aluminum decorative covers. The underlying steel posts stayed in place; only the appearance changed. The retrofit completed in two days, and the property's exterior refresh hit its target schedule.
8 ASTM F2656 K4 fixed bollards installed at a government office facade. Engineered foundations per the manufacturer's certified configuration. Project required Portland BDS permit, fire bureau review, and structural engineer stamp on the foundation drawings. Install timeline four weeks including foundation cure and as-built documentation.
Portland's wet climate and freeze-thaw cycles drive material selection:
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate.gov records show Portland averages 36 inches of annual precipitation, well above the U.S. average. Drainage at the bollard base matters more here than in drier regions.
Typical timelines:
For a representative project size (6 to 14 bollards, non-rated), expect 4 to 8 weeks total from first contact to property reopening.
Portland-area pricing aligns with the regional baseline. For a comprehensive cost breakdown, see Bollard Installation Cost.
Industry Baseline Range for typical Portland-area installations:
| Configuration | Installed Cost (each) |
|---|---|
| 6-inch standard storefront bollard | $450 to $850 |
| 8-inch heavy-duty bollard | $750 to $1,300 |
| Removable lockable bollard | $850 to $1,400 |
| ASTM F3016 S20 certified bollard | $1,500 to $4,000 |
| ASTM F2656 K4 certified bollard | $3,200 to $6,000 |
Permit fees, traffic-control plans for downtown work, and concrete cost have all climbed in 2026. Portland's downtown work zones often require traffic-control plans that add $400 to $2,000 per project beyond suburban-site bid pricing.
Cojo handles bollard projects across Portland and the metro area, from single-bollard retrofits to multi-bollard K-rated security perimeters. We provide stamped engineering drawings on K-rated work, full BDS permit handling, and code-compliance verification on every project. Contact Cojo for a Portland-specific bollard installation quote.
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