Cojo installs raised pavement markers (RPMs) across Bend and the broader Deschutes County service area, with a snow-region focus that distinguishes Bend installs from Willamette Valley work. Bend parking-lot owners face the most demanding RPM spec environment in our service map -- 60+ freeze-thaw cycles per winter, regular snowplow contact on private commercial lots, and surface temperatures that swing more than 100 degrees F across the year. ASTM D4280 Type B snowplowable cast-iron carriers are the default spec for Bend RPM work.
This page covers our Bend service area, the local code references that apply, three real install case studies, and the Industry Baseline Range for installed work.
What is the Bend service area?
We install RPMs across Deschutes County, including:
- Central Bend -- downtown, Old Mill District, Pilot Butte, Mountain View
- East Bend -- east 27th Street corridor, Forum, Highland View
- South Bend -- south US 97 retail corridor, south Cascade, Brookswood
- Northwest Bend -- west side, Northwest Crossing, Awbrey Butte edge
- Outer Deschutes County -- Redmond, Sisters, Sunriver, La Pine, Tumalo
- Project-specific work -- Hood River, Madras, Prineville on negotiated mobilization
For full Deschutes County service detail see our broader Bend service work.
What Bend code references apply to pavement markers?
Three regulatory layers apply to RPM installation in Bend:
- Federal MUTCD Section 3B.11 -- governs spacing, color, and reflectivity for RPMs as supplements to longitudinal markings. Reference Federal Highway Administration MUTCD.
- ODOT Traffic Manual Chapter 4 -- Oregon-specific supplements with snow-region guidance. The Oregon Department of Transportation publishes the current revision.
- Bend Development Code -- governs parking-lot striping and pavement marking requirements for new construction and major site improvements. The City of Bend Community Development Department administers the development code.
For private parking lots not undergoing new construction, MUTCD compliance is voluntary but is the practical standard.
What climate factors affect Bend RPM installs?
Bend is the most demanding climate in our service map for RPM specifications:
- Sustained snowplow exposure -- private commercial lots are routinely plowed by third-party services through winter. ASTM D4280 Type B snowplowable carriers are the default; Type A surface-mount markers fail in 6 - 12 months under direct plow contact.
- Severe freeze-thaw cycles -- 60+ freeze-thaw cycles per winter is typical. Polymer concrete is the minimum acceptable base for non-snowplowable applications; cast-iron is preferred for any traffic-lane install.
- High summer surface temperature -- daytime surface temperatures often exceed 145 degrees F in July and August. ABS bases are not appropriate.
- High UV exposure -- elevation and dry-air clarity push UV exposure 30 - 40 percent higher than Willamette Valley sites. Type IV or higher reflective sheeting is mandatory.
- Salt and de-icing chemical exposure -- private and municipal de-icing chemical use accelerates sheeting wear; corrosion-resistant lens housings are preferred.
Bend-spec parking-lot RPMs are typically cast-iron snowplowable carriers (3M Series 290) with Type IV or higher reflective sheeting, recessed install in cored pockets. For lots without snowplow exposure -- a small minority of Bend commercial lots -- premium polymer-concrete bases are acceptable.
What does a Bend pavement marker install include?
A typical Cojo Bend install covers:
- Site walk and existing-condition inspection with explicit snowplow path mapping
- Snowplowable spec recommendation with cast-iron carrier defaults
- MUTCD-compliant marker spacing layout per pavement marker MUTCD spacing
- Core-drill pocket preparation per ASTM D4280 Type B
- Cement grout fill and carrier set
- Lens module placement and final verification
- Cure-time traffic control
- Post-install retroreflectivity verification
For full snowplowable spec detail see pavement marker snowplow rating ASTM. For the snowplowable-versus-standard decision see pavement marker snowplowable vs standard.
Real Bend install case studies
Case study 1 -- east 27th Street retail center
An 18,000-square-foot retail center on east 27th Street, November 2025. The owner had originally specified standard polymer-concrete wet-rated markers and we pushed back during the pre-install walk -- the lot is plowed every storm by a third-party contractor. The revised spec was 60 3M Series 290 cast-iron snowplowable carriers in cored pockets. As of the May 2026 inspection all 60 markers remain functional with full lens visibility.
Case study 2 -- Old Mill District boutique retail
A 12,000-square-foot boutique retail pad in the Old Mill District, October 2025. The pad has lower vehicle traffic than the east 27th Street site but still sees full snowplow service. We installed 36 cast-iron snowplowable carriers at MUTCD-standard 40-foot lane-line spacing.
Case study 3 -- Sunriver commercial pad
A small commercial pad in the Sunriver resort village, September 2025. Sunriver maintenance handles winter plowing internally. We installed 24 cast-iron snowplowable markers in cored pockets along the pad's main drive aisle, plus 8 continuous Hi-Way Safety Systems C-80 edge markers at the curb-cut transitions where snow piles tend to accumulate.
Cost: Industry Baseline Range
Industry Baseline Range (Bend-area, installed)
| Scope | Per-marker installed cost |
|---|---|
| Standard wet-rated polymer-concrete (rare in Bend) | $13 to $20 |
| Premium wet-rated polymer-concrete (rare in Bend) | $16 to $24 |
| Cast-iron snowplowable, recessed install | $48 to $85 |
| Continuous edge marker | $22 to $38 per linear foot |
| Removal and replacement (per existing marker) | $48 to $95 |
Current Market Reality
Bend-area RPM installation pricing in 2026 has climbed faster than Willamette Valley pricing -- 12 to 16 percent year-over-year, driven primarily by cast-iron carrier cost increases (foundry capacity tightening) and longer mobilization distances from the Willamette Valley material supply. Mobilization costs are partially offset by bundling Bend RPM work with broader Bend striping or sealcoating projects.
How does Bend compare to Willamette Valley installs?
The principal differences:
- Default base type -- cast-iron snowplowable in Bend versus polymer concrete in the Willamette Valley
- Install method -- recessed core-drilled pockets in Bend versus surface-mount adhesive in the Willamette Valley
- Per-marker cost -- 3 to 4 times higher in Bend due to base material and recess install labor
- Service life -- 5 to 7 years in Bend (with cast-iron) versus 3 to 5 years in the Willamette Valley (with polymer concrete)
- Replacement scope -- typically lens-only on cast-iron carriers; full marker swap on surface-mount
For best-in-class snowplowable RPM selection see best snowplowable pavement markers 2026.