Parking Lot
Farm Supply Store Parking Lot Striping in Bend, Oregon: 2026 Service Guide
Cojo
May 29, 2026
7 min read
A farm and ranch supply store in Central Oregon serves a different customer than its valley counterparts — high-desert hobby ranchers, horse owners, and the hay-and-feed crowd spread across Deschutes County. But the lot still has the same job: move loaded trucks and trailers safely while shoppers walk through. Bend's farm supply stores cluster near the 3rd Street corridor and the NE Bend commercial pockets, where customers back pickups to the dock for feed, fencing, and bedding alongside walk-in buyers and the occasional stock trailer working a tight corner. Lay the lot out like a strip mall and it locks up the first time a gooseneck arrives.
This guide covers the layout decisions that matter for a Bend farm supply store, the industry baseline cost ranges to plan around, and the high-desert conditions that shape a striping project here.
Farm supply stores sell heavy, bulky goods that customers load themselves. The lot has to move trailers and forklifts safely while still serving walk-in shoppers — a balance ordinary retail striping never has to strike.
Bulk-feed and fertilizer loading pull-through. The most important feature is a marked pull-through loading lane near the warehouse or dock, so a customer can pull a truck and trailer alongside the building, load, and exit forward without reversing. A striped pull-through stops the gridlock a loaded rig creates when it has to three-point-turn in a busy lot.
Trailer and flatbed staging. Central Oregon ranchers arrive towing. Designated oversized stalls — longer and wider than standard — give trailers somewhere to sit while their owners shop, instead of straddling three field stalls.
Livestock-trailer turning radius. Horse and stock trailers need wide swing room. Drive aisles and corners must be striped with enough radius for a long trailer to clear without clipping parked vehicles or curbs, which usually means wider aisles in the loading zone.
Forklift keep-clear aisle. Staff move pallets with forklifts between the dock and the loading lane. A striped keep-clear aisle — painted yellow and separated from customer traffic — defines the forklift path and cuts near-misses on a busy Saturday.
ADA storefront path. Accessible spaces have to reach the entrance by a marked route that does not cross the loading lane or forklift aisle. On a lot full of trailers and freight, a clearly painted ADA path matters more than usual.
Seasonal-overflow lot. Demand swings hard in Central Oregon — hay season, pre-winter stock-up, and spring all bring surges. Striping a flexible overflow area, even with simple perimeter lines, gives you peak-weekend capacity without paving more lot than you need year-round.
The figures below are industry baseline ranges from national surveys and contractor databases. They are a starting reference, not a Cojo quote. Real Bend projects often run higher depending on lot condition, complexity, and materials.
| Lot Size | Spaces | Industry Baseline Range | Per Space (Baseline) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small store lot | 20–50 spaces | $350–$600 | $3.00–$6.00 |
| Medium store lot | 50–100 spaces | $550–$1,000 | $2.75–$5.50 |
| Large store + yard | 100–200 spaces | $950–$1,800 | $2.50–$5.00 |
| Marking | Industry Baseline Range |
|---|---|
| ADA-compliant space (complete) | $200–$350 per space |
| ADA access aisle | $75–$150 each |
| Forklift / keep-clear aisle striping | $0.30–$0.65 per linear foot |
| Loading-zone or trailer stencil | $30–$75 each |
| Directional arrow (each) | $25–$50 |
High-desert climate and curing. Bend's dry summers and big day-night temperature swings shape the striping calendar. Daytime heat cures paint quickly, but cold mornings and a shorter warm season at 3,600 feet of elevation narrow the reliable window to roughly late spring through early fall. Cool overnight temperatures can slow curing on shoulder-season days, so scheduling matters.
Freeze-thaw wear. Central Oregon's winter freeze-thaw cycles are hard on asphalt and on paint. Lines crack and wear faster than they would in the milder valley, which makes durable materials and good surface prep more valuable here.
Paint durability options. Standard water-based latex traffic paint is the most common and lasts roughly 12 to 24 months in Bend conditions, though freeze-thaw can shorten that. Oil-based paint costs more and holds up longer. Thermoplastic is the premium choice for loading lanes, forklift aisles, and ADA markings, lasting three to five years even under heavy traffic and harsh winters. Many stores mix systems — thermoplastic where the trailers run, latex on the field.
Sealcoat timing. If the asphalt is due for sealcoat, do it before striping — and sealcoat does double duty in Bend by protecting pavement against freeze-thaw damage. Fresh lines on oxidized, oil-stained pavement fade faster and bond worse. Bundling the two saves a mobilization; see our sealcoating and striping package.
A walk-through still misses conditions that only show once the old paint comes up:
This is why a site visit beats any price chart. Oregon's parking lot striping regulations set the ADA and fire-lane rules every Bend farm supply lot must follow.
For a broader look at the area, see our overview of parking lot striping in Bend, and review our professional striping services and paving and asphalt services to see how the pieces connect.
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.
Have a question about this topic? We'll respond within 24 hours.