Cojo installs ADA-compliant truncated dome panels across Eugene — University of Oregon campus paths, downtown sidewalk corridors, west Eugene retail centers, and LTD (Lane Transit District) bus-stop platforms. Eugene's combination of older sidewalk infrastructure, active EmX bus-rapid-transit work, and pedestrian-heavy university routes makes ADA dome retrofit a recurring scope. This page covers our Eugene service area, Eugene Public Works Administration (PWA) and EPP standards coordination, three real Eugene install case studies, and how to schedule.
For the broader product overview, see our truncated domes guide.
> Compliance disclaimer: Always verify current detectable warning requirements with the City of Eugene. This article reflects 2026 federal ADA Standards (28 CFR Part 36, Appendix B), Eugene Pedestrian and Bicycle Standards (EPP), and Oregon ORS 447.
Eugene Service Area
Cojo's Eugene crews cover:
- Downtown: Willamette Street, Broadway, Olive, Pearl, Park Blocks
- University area: Franklin Boulevard, Agate, Alder, 13th Avenue
- South Eugene: Amazon, College Hill, Friendly, Crest
- West Eugene: Bertelsen, Beltline retail corridor, Royal Avenue
- River Road and Santa Clara
- East Eugene and Cal Young
- Springfield adjacency: combined trips with our Springfield service area
What Eugene Code Applies?
Three layers govern dome installation work in Eugene:
- Federal ADA — ADA Standards 705 (dome geometry, contrast), 406.13 (placement at curb ramps), 810.5.2 (transit platforms). Enforced via 28 CFR Part 36.
- Oregon state — ORS 447 wraps state-specific ADA requirements; the Oregon Structural Specialty Code governs building-level alterations.
- City of Eugene — Eugene Land Use Code Chapter 9, Eugene Pedestrian and Bicycle Standards (EPP), and Public Works Administration permit guidance.
Eugene Public Works Administration issues right-of-way permits for sidewalk and curb-cut work. EPP standards govern the geometry and surface treatment of pedestrian facilities including curb ramps and detectable warning placement.
Industry Baseline Range
| Item | Range |
|---|---|
| Single curb-cut retrofit (surface-applied) | $440 to $920 |
| Pair of curb cuts at one intersection | $820 to $1,650 |
| 6-curb-cut block-face retrofit | $3,200 to $6,400 |
| Eugene PWA right-of-way permit | $120 to $350 |
| Traffic control day rate | $400 to $1,100 |
| Cast-in-place new construction (per panel) | $440 to $980 |
| LTD bus-stop platform retrofit (60 lf typical) | $5,400 to $11,000 |
Current Market Reality
Eugene labor and permit costs run similar to Salem and 8 to 12 percent below Portland. Material costs lifted 12 to 18 percent in late 2025 from polymer feedstock pressure. EmX bus-rapid-transit corridor work that intersects dome retrofit timing carries a coordination premium because LTD has its own platform-edge product spec for the EmX system.
Three Recent Eugene Installs
UO Campus Path Retrofit (2026)
A retrofit on the University of Oregon's south-campus parking-lot path replaced 6 surface-applied panels that had failed an annual ADA audit. The original brick-red panels installed in 2018 had faded below the 70 percent ADA 705.2 contrast threshold. Cojo specified UV-stable safety yellow (LRV 76) on the same stained-concrete walking surface — contrast jumped to 71 percent on day one. Total panel material was $1,440 across the 6 panels.
West Eugene Retail Block Retrofit (2026)
A west Eugene retail center along Beltline Highway needed 5 sidewalk curb cuts retrofitted before a city ADA enforcement deadline. Cojo coordinated the install with traffic control on the retail-frontage street and completed the retrofit in a single 2-day window. All 5 cuts passed Eugene PWA verification on first inspection.
LTD Bus-Stop Platform Refresh (2026)
A Lane Transit District bus-stop platform on Franklin Boulevard had developed edge-lift on its surface-applied composite panels after 11 winters. Cojo replaced 90 linear feet of platform-edge detectable warnings with new cast-in-place composite panels in a Sunday-night through Monday-morning install window with LTD service rerouting. Total project ran in the upper end of the bus-stop baseline due to night-shift labor and the cast-in-place overlay pour.
What Permits Does Cojo Handle?
Cojo coordinates Eugene Public Works right-of-way permits, EPP standards verification, and any traffic-control plan required for the install. For University of Oregon campus paths, we coordinate with UO Campus Operations in addition to Eugene PWA. For LTD platform work, lead times extend to 8 to 16 weeks because the platform stays in service during the work.
Eugene Climate Considerations
Eugene's wet southern Willamette Valley climate stresses dome panels in two specific ways:
- Adhesive joint failure from heavy winter rain. Cojo recommends polyurethane sealant re-application every 5 years on surface-applied panels.
- Color fade is moderate; safety yellow holds reliably for 12 to 15 years and brick red 8 to 10 years.
Snow events are rare and snowplow damage is not a typical failure mode. Composite panels remain the standard product for Eugene retrofits.
How Does Eugene Coordinate UO Campus Work?
University of Oregon campus paths cross both city right-of-way and university property. Curb cuts on city streets routed through PWA; campus internal paths routed through UO Campus Operations and the UO ADA Coordinator. Cojo handles both coordination paths. UO maintains its own pedestrian path standards that align with EPP and federal ADA.
How Does Eugene Coordinate LTD Transit Work?
Lane Transit District Facilities Department signs off on platform spec, and LTD's ADA Coordinator runs final verification. Lead times for LTD platform work run 8 to 16 weeks from initial contact to install date because the platforms must remain in service during the work, requiring night-shift or off-peak scheduling.
Need a Truncated Dome Install in Eugene?
Cojo runs free site walk-throughs across Eugene for ADA path-of-travel and dome-retrofit scoping. We provide a written compliance scope, permit-fee estimate, and per-panel install quote. Contact Cojo to schedule.