Bollard Installation in Oregon: Statewide Service
Oregon bollard work spans dramatically different conditions: silty clay in the Willamette Valley, decomposed granite in Central Oregon, salt exposure on the coast, and high-volume retail along the I-5 corridor. Each region has its own city or county code, its own soil profile, and its own seasonal install window. Cojo provides bollard installation statewide and coordinates code, ADA, and ODOT compliance per jurisdiction. This page covers the regulatory and technical landscape -- where the rules differ and how that shapes the work.
Quick Answer: How Does Cojo Handle Statewide Oregon Bollard Work?
Cojo runs bollard installation across Oregon as a single coordinated service: one project manager, one CCB-licensed crew, jurisdiction-specific permitting, and a written ADA compliance review per site. Standard 6-inch concrete-filled steel pipe runs $400 to $1,200 installed. ODOT-jurisdiction work along state highways requires conformance with the ODOT Design Manual; city-jurisdiction work follows Portland Title 33.266, Salem Chapter 79, Eugene EPP, Bend land-use code, or Springfield code as applicable. ADA Section 307 and Section 403.5 enforce statewide.
Which Oregon Codes Apply to Bollard Installation?
Bollard work in Oregon answers to three layers of code:
Federal layer
- ADA Standards (29 CFR 36 Subpart D, plus the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design). Section 307 caps protrusions at 4 inches; Section 403.5 sets 36-inch minimum clear travel width on accessible routes (ADA.gov Standards).
- OSHA 1910.176 for materials handling -- powered industrial truck protection at columns, racking, and dock edges (OSHA Materials Handling).
- DHS Interagency Security Committee BIPS-12 for federal facility perimeter protection -- ASTM F2656 K-rating compliance required (DHS ISC publications).
State layer
- Oregon Structural Specialty Code (OSSC) -- adopted statewide, incorporates the IBC and the federal ADA Standards by reference.
- ODOT Design Manual -- governs all state-property work and right-of-way installations along Highways 26, 99W, 217, and the I-5 corridor (ODOT Design Manual).
- ORS 447 -- Oregon's accessibility statute, enforced through local Building Codes Division offices.
Local layer (varies by city)
| City | Local code reference |
|---|---|
| Portland | Title 33.266 (parking and loading) |
| Salem | Salem Revised Code Chapter 79 |
| Eugene | Eugene Public Property and Parking Code (EPP) |
| Bend | Bend Development Code, land-use sections |
| Springfield | Springfield Development Code |
| Beaverton | Beaverton Development Code |
| Hillsboro | Hillsboro Community Development Code |
| Gresham | Gresham Community Development Code |
| Corvallis | Corvallis Land Development Code |
| Medford | Medford Land Development Code, Title 10 |
What Soil and Climate Conditions Affect Oregon Installs?
Oregon climate and soil vary widely. Three regional realities shape installation work:
- Willamette Valley silty clay. Holds bollards well at standard 24 to 36 inch depth. Freeze-thaw runs 25 to 40 cycles per winter -- air-entrained concrete mandatory. High water table in flood plains near the Willamette and major tributaries.
- Central Oregon decomposed granite. Sites around Bend and Redmond hit refusal earlier than auger-cured Willamette sites. Rotary core drilling required for retrofit work. Summer pours need wet-cure protection to manage shrinkage.
- Coastal salt exposure. Saltwater proximity demands 316 stainless or hot-dip galvanized-and-painted steel. Every coastal install gets corrosion protection upgrades.
- Rogue Valley clay-and-granite mix. Medford and Ashland sites mix shallow clay with deeper decomposed granite. Core-test before pouring.
What Did Cojo's Most Recent Statewide Project Look Like?
In April 2026 we completed a 4-site, 32-bollard rollout for a regional retail group across Salem, Eugene, Bend, and Medford. Each site received 8 ASTM F2656 K4 crash-rated bollards along the storefront entrance, set in 48 inch footings with epoxy anchor cages. The K4 spec was driven by the insurance underwriter rather than any single city's ordinance. Bend's decomposed granite required rotary core drilling on 6 of the 8 footings. Total project: 8 work days across 4 weeks, single 2-person crew traveling. Photo logs, ASTM cert packages, and concrete mix slips delivered per unit. See our bollard installation cost page for the per-line breakdown.
How Much Does Bollard Installation Cost in Oregon?
Industry Baseline Range (statewide averages):
| Bollard Type | Installed Price (each) |
|---|---|
| 4-inch steel pipe, surface-mount | $300 to $700 |
| 6-inch concrete-filled steel pipe, embedded | $400 to $1,200 |
| 8-inch forklift-rated, embedded | $700 to $1,600 |
| Removable bollard with sleeve | $700 to $1,800 |
| Decorative cast bollard | $800 to $2,500 |
| ASTM F3016 low-speed crash | $1,200 to $3,000 |
| ASTM F2656 K4 crash-rated | $1,500 to $4,000 |
| ASTM F2656 K12 crash-rated | $4,500 to $10,000 |
Current Market Reality
Oregon 2026 bollard pricing runs above the published baselines because of three factors: rising aggregate and concrete delivery rates statewide (roughly 8 to 12 percent year over year), constrained Pacific Northwest steel inventory pushing freight from out of region for 8-inch and stainless stock, and a labor pool tightened by the post-2024 reconstruction boom in southern Oregon. ODOT-coordinated jobs along state highways pull a small premium for traffic control and scheduling.
What Does Statewide Coordination Look Like?
Multi-site Oregon projects run through Cojo as a single rolling engagement:
- Master scope. Site walks at all locations, ADA reviews, code identification per jurisdiction, and a single master quote with per-site detail.
- Permitting per city. We pull permits at each city or county as required. ODOT permits run separately when state-property work is involved.
- Crew rolling schedule. One CCB-licensed 2-person crew traveling, with overlapping pours timed for 7-day cure spacing.
- Per-site close-out. Photo log, anchor type, embedment depth, concrete mix slip, and (for crash-rated work) ASTM certification package delivered per site.
For ADA-specific scoping, see our ADA bollard clearance and the broader ADA parking requirements Oregon reference. For city-level work, see our bollards near me Oregon directory.
Which Oregon Cities Does Cojo Serve for Bollard Work?
Cojo provides bollard installation across Portland, Beaverton, Hillsboro, Gresham, Tigard, Tualatin, Salem, Albany, Corvallis, Eugene, Springfield, Bend, Medford, Ashland, Hood River, The Dalles, and additional cities along the I-5 corridor. Coastal and Eastern Oregon sites are served on a project basis with travel surcharge.
Get an Oregon Bollard Quote
Cojo handles bollard installation statewide. Every quote comes with a written ADA compliance review and a code citation pulled from your local jurisdiction. Contact Cojo to schedule a site walk; statewide bollard work usually pairs with the rest of our parking lot services, and the how to install bollards write-up has the technical detail.