Greater Albany Public Schools operates more than 15 campuses across Linn County, serving the I-5 corridor population from Albany east to the Cascades. The district's striping cycle has to satisfy MUTCD compliance, current Oregon Building Code ADA pedestrian access standards, and a summer-break-only construction window that closes when staff training begins in late August. This page walks the district's facilities director and capital projects coordinator through what school district parking lot striping in Albany involves and how the multi-campus bid workflow should run.
Why Greater Albany Public Schools Striping Is a Multi-Campus Capital Project
Every K-12 campus serves four user groups -- staff, parent drop-off, school-bus loading, visitors -- and all four have to coexist inside MUTCD (Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices) compliance.
ADA compliance is the harder constraint. Each campus needs the correct count of accessible stalls relative to total parking, accessible routes from designated ADA stalls to the main building entrance, and crosswalks and curb ramps marked to current Oregon Building Code. Failure to meet ADA standards exposes the district to compliance complaints and remediation deadlines.
With 15-plus campuses, the district handles striping through a rotating audit cycle. A multi-campus contract amortizes mobilization across many sites, gives the district consistent compliance documentation, and runs the bid review process once instead of for every campus individually.
Linn County and the Summer-Break Work Window
The practical work window runs from the Monday after the last school day in mid-June through the Friday before staff training week in late August. In Albany that gives about 8 to 10 weeks.
Inside that window:
- Crack-fill and sealcoat (where in scope)
- Restripe to current MUTCD and ADA standards
- Final cure complete before staff return
For summer 2026 execution, the RFP should be out by early March, bids back by mid-April, award by early May.
A Linn County specific consideration: lots that drain toward the Willamette or Calapooia river frontages can sit closer to the seasonal water table than topo maps suggest. The contractor should account for any standing-water spots in the bid scope, because those zones often need crack-fill and crack-sealing volumes 30 to 50 percent higher than the rest of the lot.
Layout Standards Across Greater Albany Public Schools Campuses
A complete striping scope at each campus addresses:
- Staff parking with standard 9-foot stall widths
- ADA accessible stalls at current Oregon Building Code count, with at least one van-accessible per campus
- Accessible routes from ADA stalls to the main entrance, curb-cut compliant
- Parent drop-off lane with directional arrows, no-stopping zones, student-loading marking
- Bus loading zone with no-parking restrictions and bus-only marking
- Crosswalks at all building approaches, MUTCD ladder or transverse pattern
- Fire lanes with red-curb paint and "FIRE LANE - NO PARKING" stenciling per Albany Fire Department
- Reserved stalls (principal, visitor, staff)
- Speed bumps where applicable, yellow chevron warning marking
For the signage standards, see our parking sign for school guide.
Industry Baseline Range for Greater Albany Public Schools Striping
Industry Baseline Range
| Project type | Cost per square foot of striping work | Typical total |
|---|---|---|
| Single elementary campus | $0.05 to $0.18 | $1,500 to $7,000+ |
| Single middle or K-8 campus | $0.05 to $0.18 | $3,500 to $14,000+ |
| Single high school campus | $0.05 to $0.16 | $7,000 to $26,000+ |
| District multi-campus contract (8 to 15 campuses) | $0.05 to $0.16 | $30,000 to $160,000+ |
Current Market Reality
Greater Albany Public Schools striping prices track closely with the mid-Willamette Valley because mobilization from Salem and Eugene asphalt and paint suppliers is reasonable and contractor competition is healthy. The drivers that move pricing most: total linear feet of striping, stenciling count, whether sealcoat is bundled in the same mobilization, and whether the scope triggers any ADA curb-ramp installation or crosswalk reconstruction. For statewide cost context, see the Oregon asphalt paving cost guide.
Bond-Funded Capital Improvement Workflow
The decision path for a Greater Albany district striping project:
- Facilities director identifies the project in the capital improvement plan 12 to 24 months out.
- Scope developed against MUTCD and ADA compliance gaps from the most recent facility audit.
- District capital projects coordinator issues an RFP through procurement.
- Three to five bids returned and evaluated against the scope document.
- Contract awarded and construction scheduled inside the summer-break window.
- Campus-by-campus inspection and ADA verification before staff return.
The full arc runs 4 to 8 months. For summer 2026 execution, the RFP should be out by early March.
What an On-Site Walk Catches at Each Campus
A walkthrough with the facilities team at each campus surfaces scope-affecting conditions:
- Existing striping in poor condition requiring sandblast or grind-out before new paint
- ADA stall locations no longer matching current code
- Crosswalks missing where current MUTCD spec requires them
- Speed bump and signage gaps
- Fire-lane curb paint condition
- Pavement condition flags requiring sealcoat or repair before striping
- Drainage paths shifted by stormwater work
Skipping the walk and bidding off a site plan is the most common reason a multi-campus contract goes 20 to 30 percent over its initial number.
For Albany-wide context, see Albany parking lot striping and Albany sealcoating.
Maintenance Cadence for District Properties
A standing asphalt maintenance services program keeps Greater Albany Public Schools campuses inspection-ready year over year:
- Crack-fill every spring after the wet season
- Full restripe every 2 to 3 years on a rotating campus schedule
- Sealcoat every 4 to 5 years on a rotating campus schedule
- Pre-school-year touch-up annually for high-wear zones
- Crosswalk and ADA marking inspection every fall
A single CCB-licensed contractor accountable for a multi-year district contract is meaningfully cheaper and more consistent than year-by-year single-campus bids.
Bid Evaluation Criteria the Facilities Director Should Watch
A clean bid review compares apples to apples. The scope document should specify striping paint type (latex traffic vs high-build acrylic), total linear feet of striping, stencil count by type (ADA symbol, fire lane text, stop bars, directional arrows), crosswalk count and pattern, and any included sealcoat or crack-fill volume. Bids that bundle these into a lump-sum number are harder to compare and harder to defend to the capital projects coordinator. Reject scope documents without itemization.
Schedule the Greater Albany District Walk
Cojo writes itemized district striping bids, walks every campus with the facilities team, and times multi-campus mobilizations against the summer-break window with weather buffer days built in. We are CCB licensed and insured and serve the I-5 corridor through Linn County. Request a district walk and we will get campus visits on the calendar within two weeks.