Parking Lot
Medical Office Parking Lot Striping in Hubbard, Oregon: 2026 Service Guide
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
A medical office lot has to move patients — many of them elderly, in pain, or anxious — from car to clinic door with minimal walking and zero confusion. It also has to handle a steady appointment-driven churn, all-day staff parking, lab couriers, and, in a multi-tenant plaza, the challenge of pointing patients to the right building. None of that happens by accident. It comes from striping that puts accessibility and turnover ahead of raw space count.
In Hubbard, a French Prairie farm town on Highway 99E in Marion County, a medical office serves the working families of a nursery and agricultural community, where many patients are squeezing a visit between farm and family obligations. Cojo Excavation & Asphalt stripes medical and clinic lots across Marion County. Here is how we approach the layout and what it costs.
Appointments run on a schedule, so the lot sees constant arrivals and departures. The front rows nearest the entrance should be sized and arranged for that turnover — wide enough for an older patient to open a door fully and step out comfortably, and laid out so the churn flows. We reserve the nearest spaces for patients and push longer-stay parking outward.
This is the single most important element of a medical lot. Accessible spaces must sit on the shortest accessible route to the entrance, with a properly marked access aisle, the International Symbol of Accessibility, signage, and a continuous path of travel. A clinic often needs more accessible spaces than the bare minimum because so many patients have mobility needs. We lay these out first.
Clinical and office staff park all day, so their stalls belong at the back of the lot, freeing the high-value front rows for patients. A clear painted boundary keeps the turnover zone working without a parking attendant.
Medical offices see lab couriers making quick in-and-out stops, and they need a marked short-stay space near a side or service entrance so they do not take patient parking or block the drive aisle.
Wheelchair-accessible vans need extra clearance to deploy a ramp or lift, so the access aisle beside van-accessible stalls has to be striped wide and kept genuinely clear. It is a detail that distinguishes a properly laid-out medical lot.
In a multi-tenant medical plaza, patients need to find the right building. Directional arrows, drive-aisle lane lines, and the occasional ground stencil guide them to the correct entrance instead of circling. Clean wayfinding reduces the slow, confused driving that frustrates patients before they reach the door.
Striping is one of the most affordable improvements a medical property can make, especially measured against the goodwill of a patient who arrives unstressed. Your total depends on lot size, surface condition, and how much of the work is ADA and wayfinding versus plain parking lines. For regional baselines, see our parking lot striping cost in Oregon guide.
Cost factors specific to a medical office:
We quote off an actual measurement of your lot.
Medical office lots in Marion County answer to both federal ADA standards and Oregon's accessible-parking rules, which govern count, dimensions, aisle width, signage, and path of travel. Because clinics serve a higher share of patients with mobility needs, the practical bar is often stricter than the minimum on paper. A restripe is a natural moment to bring an older lot into current compliance rather than repaint a layout that no longer passes. Hubbard's Highway 99E frontage also means clear drive-aisle striping helps separate patient flow from the busy state-route traffic.
Paint needs dry pavement and temperatures above roughly 50°F, so the Willamette Valley striping season runs late spring through early fall. For a medical office the main consideration is patient disruption, so we phase the work to keep part of the lot — and the accessible spaces — open, or run it in the evening or on a lighter clinic day. Booking ahead gives you the choice of window.
We know Marion County lots, we know the ADA requirements clinics live under, and we lay out medical parking for the way patients actually move. You get a measured quote, clean lines, compliant accessible parking, and wayfinding that does its job. See our view our work gallery, or learn about our professional striping services.
Request a free quote for your Hubbard medical office. We will measure the lot and return a transparent, itemized estimate, usually within 24 hours.
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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