The best jersey barrier for your parking-lot perimeter is the one whose containment level, profile shape, lead time, and delivery cost line up with your site. There's no single "best" model. Below is the buyer-side comparison our estimating team runs when pricing perimeter and construction-zone work across the Oregon I-5 corridor.
A jersey barrier is a redirective concrete vehicle barrier with a sloped lower face that forces a striking vehicle's tire up the slope, dissipating energy through tire-and-suspension deflection rather than crushing the vehicle. The Federal Highway Administration's Roadside Design Guide lists the F-shape jersey profile as the modern crash-tested standard, with crash performance graded under AASHTO MASH at Test Levels TL-3, TL-4, and TL-5 depending on barrier height and vehicle class.
How to Compare Jersey Barriers in 2026
When we evaluate barriers for a perimeter or construction-zone install, we sort manufacturer options against six criteria that actually move the project budget:
- Profile shape -- F-shape (modern, lower vault tendency) versus J-shape (legacy NJ profile) versus single-slope (Texas constant-slope T-22).
- MASH containment level -- TL-3 covers passenger-vehicle redirective performance. TL-4 adds single-unit truck. TL-5 adds tractor-semitrailer.
- Section length -- 10-foot is industry standard, 12-foot and 20-foot reduce joint count on long runs.
- Connection system -- pin-and-loop versus cast-in pickup eyes versus tongue-and-groove. Affects setup speed and wind/impact behavior at joints.
- Local stocking depth -- a manufacturer 100 miles away with 200 sections in stock beats one 30 miles away with 30.
- Delivery and crane requirements -- a 10-foot section weighs about 4,000 pounds per USDOT Federal Highway Administration crash-test data, which dictates the lift gear needed at site.
A 24,000-square-foot Salem retail perimeter we barriered in February 2026 used 84 ten-foot F-shape sections from an Oregon precast plant 38 miles away. The local stocking depth saved that project six business days against the alternative Washington supplier quote.
Top 5 Jersey Barrier Manufacturers for Pacific Northwest Perimeter Projects
These are the manufacturers we specify most often for permanent and rental jersey barrier work in Oregon. Stocking depth and delivery radius are the two factors that swing month to month — always verify both at quote time.
| Manufacturer | Section Length | Profile | MASH Rating | Pickup System | Typical Lead Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oldcastle Infrastructure | 10 / 12 / 20 ft | F-shape | TL-3 / TL-4 | Cast-in lifting eyes | 7 to 14 days |
| Knife River (Pacific Northwest plants) | 10 ft | F-shape | TL-3 | Cast-in lifting eyes | 5 to 10 days |
| Concrete Industries (Lincoln NE) | 10 / 20 ft | F-shape, single-slope | TL-3 / TL-4 / TL-5 | Pin-and-loop | 14 to 28 days |
| Bryan Concrete (regional precaster) | 10 / 12 ft | F-shape | TL-3 | Cast-in eyes | 7 to 14 days |
| Wausau Tile / Sanderson (decorative) | 10 ft | F-shape with finish options | TL-3 | Cast-in eyes | 21 to 35 days |
Permanent commercial perimeter
For a permanent perimeter run that won't be relocated, Oldcastle and Knife River F-shape sections are our default. Both ship MASH TL-3 sections out of regional plants, both use cast-in lifting eyes that play nicely with standard 2-point spreader bars, and both support custom-color sealers when a property manager wants the perimeter to read less industrial.
Truck-court and industrial perimeter
When a perimeter sits next to a loading dock or fuel-truck route, MASH TL-4 is the spec floor. Concrete Industries' 20-foot single-slope sections cut joint count in half versus standard 10-foot F-shape, which matters when a moving truck sideswipes the barrier and would otherwise rotate a short section. The trade-off is freight: 20-foot sections at 8,000 pounds each need a 30-ton crane and a tilt-deck trailer, not a forklift.
Rental and temporary construction
Plastic water-filled barriers (Yodock, Triton) are the right product for short-term construction-zone control under 90 days. They cost a fraction of concrete to deliver and reposition, but they're channelizing devices, not crash-rated barriers — manufacturer datasheets cap redirective performance at impact speeds above 35 mph. Anytime a rental needs MASH-rated containment, concrete jersey is still the answer. See our jersey barrier rental cost guide for typical Pacific Northwest pricing.
What Profile Should You Specify? F-Shape vs J-Shape vs Single-Slope
Profile shape is the biggest single factor in how a jersey barrier performs in a real impact. Federal Highway Administration crash-test data summarized in FHWA's roadside hardware policy shows the F-shape was developed specifically to dial back the vault tendency that the original J-shape exhibited with smaller passenger cars.
- F-shape (modern standard) — 3-inch toe at the base, 13-inch lower slope, 32-inch overall height in TL-3 form. Modern precasters default to this profile.
- J-shape (legacy New Jersey) — 3-inch toe, taller lower slope. Still produced for repair-match in legacy installations. Not recommended for new specs.
- Single-slope (Texas T-22 / California Type 60) — constant 9.1-degree slope from base to top, 32-inch standard height. Better re-strike performance and easier post-crash repair.
For new Oregon perimeter projects we spec F-shape, unless the parking lot abuts a public roadway already running single-slope. In that case, profile-match wins.
How Many Sections Will You Need?
A standard 10-foot F-shape section provides 10 linear feet of barrier minus the joint gap. For a 1,000-foot perimeter run, plan on 100 sections plus 10 percent contingency for the corner and tie-in fittings -- roughly 110 sections.
Industry Baseline Range
| Project Type | Sections Needed (per 1,000 lf) | Crane Time (8-hr days) |
|---|---|---|
| Straight perimeter run, level grade | 100 to 110 | 1 to 2 |
| Perimeter with corners and grade changes | 110 to 125 | 2 to 3 |
| Truck-court perimeter (20-ft sections) | 50 to 60 | 1 to 2 |
Current Market Reality
In 2026, regional precaster lead times have stretched to 10 to 14 business days at most Oregon plants because the freight tightening of late 2025 pushed several smaller producers to drop concrete barrier lines. Crane-time billing has also moved up roughly 18 percent since 2024 across the I-5 corridor, driven by operator certification cost and fuel pricing. The practical effect is that a perimeter project quoted in early 2024 will run 12 to 20 percent higher in mid-2026, with the spread mostly in delivery and crane line items, not the barrier units themselves.
What Connection System Should You Pick?
Three connection systems dominate the market:
- Cast-in pickup loops -- two cast-in steel eyes per section, accepts a 2-point spreader bar. Fastest to set with a standard 30-ton crane.
- Pin-and-loop -- horizontal steel pin engages a cast-in loop on the adjacent section. Better lateral connectivity in impact, slower to install.
- Tongue-and-groove -- formed concrete profile mates section to section. Used most often on freeway and TL-5 work, less common on parking-lot perimeter.
For most parking-lot perimeter installs, cast-in pickup loops with a steel pin keyed at the joint is the right balance of install speed and impact connectivity.
When Do You Need MASH TL-4 or TL-5 Instead of TL-3?
Most parking-lot perimeter work is satisfied with TL-3, which crash-tests against an 1,100-pound small passenger car at 62 miles per hour and a 4,400-pound pickup at 62 miles per hour. Step up to TL-4 when the perimeter could reasonably see a single-unit truck impact -- distribution centers, fuel station cross-traffic, industrial truck courts. TL-5 is reserved for sites where a tractor-semitrailer impact is foreseeable, which on a parking lot usually means a fueling depot or a port-adjacent industrial parcel.
Crash-rated barrier ratings under ASTM F2656 (the M30/M40/M50 hostile-vehicle standard) are a separate framework from MASH and cover anti-ram performance against deliberate vehicle attack, not redirective roadside hardware behavior. See our explainer on ASTM F2656 ratings for the distinction.
Where We Source Jersey Barriers for Oregon Projects
We run perimeter and construction-zone barrier work out of Salem and the Portland metro. For permanent perimeter projects on the I-5 corridor, our two default suppliers are Knife River out of Harrisburg and Oldcastle out of the Portland regional plant. For truck-court and TL-4 work we step up to Concrete Industries out of Nebraska on a 14- to 21-day lead. For rental and event-perimeter work, we pull from a regional barrier-rental network in the Portland metro on 48- to 72-hour delivery.
For city-specific install records, see jersey barrier rental in Portland.