Parking Lot
Dental Office Parking Lot Striping in Sandy, Oregon: 2026 Service Guide
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
A dental office lot lives and dies by turnover. Patients arrive on a schedule, every 30 to 60 minutes, and the lot has to absorb that steady churn without the front row filling up with staff cars or a sedation patient's ride circling for a spot. Striping is what keeps the rhythm. Quick-turnover stalls, a clean staff-versus-patient split, a short-term sedation-pickup zone, and a clear path to the door all keep a full appointment book from spilling into the parking lot.
Sandy sits in Clackamas County along Highway 26, the gateway to Mt. Hood, with commercial frontage centered on Pioneer Boulevard. Dental practices here serve the town and surrounding foothill community, and many sit in multi-tenant buildings where clear striping does double duty. The foothill location brings a wetter climate and winter freeze-thaw that wear on traffic paint, so durability and timing both matter.
This guide covers what a Sandy dental office should expect from a striping project: the turnover and access markings, sedation-pickup considerations, and honest industry cost ranges to read a quote against.
The front rows need to turn over cleanly between appointments. A well-spaced, clearly striped layout near the entrance keeps patients from circling, and stenciled patient-parking markings keep the closest stalls reserved for the people who need them.
ADA-compliant stalls with a painted access aisle as close to the door as the layout allows are required, and they matter especially for patients arriving sore or recovering. A continuous, clearly marked path-of-travel to the entrance completes the access.
A clearly marked staff zone, set away from the entrance, keeps employee vehicles from occupying the prime patient stalls all day. This single division does more for patient experience than almost any other marking in a small professional lot.
Patients leaving after sedation need a ride, and a short-term loading zone gives that ride a clear place to wait. For practices with early or late hours, simple single-entry wayfinding markings — reflective in Sandy's dark winters — help patients find the door.
Industry baseline ranges shown below. Actual costs vary and may run higher based on surface condition, paint type, layout complexity, and current market conditions. These are not Cojo quotes.
| Lot Size | Spaces | Industry Baseline Range | Per Space (Baseline) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small lot | 20–50 spaces | $350–$600 | $3.00–$6.00 |
| Medium lot | 50–100 spaces | $550–$1,000 | $2.75–$5.50 |
| Large lot | 100–200 spaces | $950–$1,800 | $2.50–$5.00 |
| Item | Industry Baseline |
|---|---|
| Standard 4-inch parking lines | $0.20–$0.50 per LF |
| Directional arrows (each) | $25–$50 |
| Loading-zone / reserved stencils | $30–$75 each |
| ADA-compliant space (complete) | $200–$350 per space |
| ADA signage (post + sign) | $150–$250 each |
Sound asphalt takes paint immediately. A lot with cracking or worn old paint needs prep first, and Sandy's foothill freeze-thaw cycles accelerate cracking over winters. The work has to land in a genuinely dry stretch for the paint to cure well.
A simple lot is inexpensive to mark. A practice with a defined staff zone, sedation-pickup loading, ADA stalls, and multi-tenant wayfinding takes more layout time and paint.
Striping season in Sandy runs late spring through early fall, when temperatures hold above 50°F and the foothill ground has dried. Sandy's wetter, cooler climate narrows the window, so scheduling around a closure day or lighter appointment week within a dry stretch matters — book early to find that combination.
The baselines above reflect historically reported national averages. Actual Sandy and Oregon project costs often run higher, sometimes two to three times, depending on:
Use published ranges as a reference, not a budget. A site-specific quote is the only accurate number.
Surprises common to dental lots once striping starts:
A walk-the-lot assessment beats any chart. A contractor who reads your Sandy office lot gives a far better number than any average.
Signs it is time:
For a dental practice, a clean, orderly lot reinforces the same care patients expect inside the office.
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