ADA parking signs in Portland are not a generic post-and-bracket job. The federal R7-8 base sign and the R7-8a van-accessible add-on must mount at a specific height, on a specific sheeting grade, with a specific bottom-of-sign clearance from the access aisle, and they have to clear Portland's layered review framework on top of the federal ADA Standard. A sign that meets the price point but misses the mounting height by 6 inches is not compliant.
Below is what we deliver on a Portland ADA install, the federal and Portland-specific code stack we work against, and what a defensible accessible sign system looks like once the crew rolls out.
Quick Answer
Cojo installs ADA parking signs across Portland to the federal R7-8 specification with the R7-8a van-accessible add-on where required. Every install hits ADA Standard 502.6 (60-inch mounting height to bottom of sign), uses 0.080-inch aluminum blanks with ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic sheeting, and includes Portland Title 17 permit coordination where the sign is within 10 feet of a public right-of-way. Pricing runs $275 to $525 per R7-8 / R7-8a pair installed.
What ADA Standard Governs Parking Sign Installation in Portland?
ADA Standard 502.6 controls the parking sign requirement at every accessible stall in Portland and across the country. The rule:
- Each accessible parking space must be identified by a sign showing the International Symbol of Accessibility.
- The bottom of the sign must be at least 60 inches above the finished pavement.
- Van-accessible spaces require an additional designation, typically the R7-8a "Van Accessible" plate mounted directly below the R7-8.
The full ADA Standards are at the U.S. Access Board and the federal text lives at ADA.gov. Portland enforces ADA through the federal framework plus Oregon Building Code accessibility requirements, which apply to private property as well as public.
What Portland-Specific Codes Layer On Top of the Federal ADA Standard?
Portland adds two layers to the federal ADA framework on every accessible-sign installation:
- Portland Title 33.266 (Parking and Loading) governs accessible-stall layout and signage on private commercial property. Full text on the Portland.gov code site.
- Portland Title 32 (Signs and Related Regulations) controls sign permits where the sign sits within 10 feet of public right-of-way. Most parking lots that face a public street trigger Title 32 review.
- Bureau of Development Services (BDS) provides accessibility plan review on commercial sign permits affecting ADA stalls.
The combined effect: an ADA sign install in a Portland commercial lot can require federal ADA compliance, Oregon Building Code review, Title 33.266 layout coordination, and Title 17 permit submission. We coordinate all four on every install.
What Does Cojo Specify on a Portland ADA Sign Install?
Our Portland default specification for an R7-8 / R7-8a pair:
- Sign blank: 0.080-inch aluminum, alodine-treated. We do not install plastic ADA signs in Portland; the freeze-thaw cycle and Title 33.266 review both work against polymer blanks.
- Sheeting: ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic minimum. Type IV diamond grade on signs facing public ROW per MUTCD §2A.08 retroreflectivity guidance, available at mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov.
- Mounting height: 60 inches from finished pavement to bottom of the lower sign on the post (R7-8a plate). This puts the bottom of the R7-8 itself at roughly 72 inches.
- Post: 2-inch galvanized round post into a 12-inch diameter concrete footing, set 24 inches deep to clear the PNW frost line.
- Ground sign separation: No lower sign within 80 inches of the bottom of the R7-8 to keep the access aisle visually clean.
What Cojo Delivered on a Northeast Portland Healthcare Campus, March 2026
A property management firm overseeing a 22,000 sq ft outpatient healthcare campus in Northeast Portland called us in March 2026 to refresh the ADA sign system after a Bureau of Development Services accessibility flag. The site had:
- 8 ADA stalls, 6 standard-accessible plus 2 van-accessible
- All 8 R7-8 signs mounted at 54 inches (6 inches below the federal minimum)
- Faded Type II sheeting, no R7-8a van-accessible plate on the 2 van stalls
Our scope across one Saturday plus a follow-up Tuesday morning:
- 8 R7-8 sign re-installs at the federal 60-inch mounting height
- 2 R7-8a van-accessible plates installed directly below the R7-8 on the van stalls
- 8 new 2-inch galvanized round posts, 12-inch concrete footings, 24-inch frost depth
- ASTM D4956 Type III sheeting upgraded to Type IV on the 4 stalls facing the public ROW frontage
- BDS accessibility documentation submitted with photo log and GPS for each sign
Total install ran in the $3,400 to $4,800 range, consistent with the Industry Baseline Range for an 8-stall ADA sign refresh in Portland with permit coordination.
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Cost |
|---|---|
| Standard R7-8 ADA sign on new post | $225 to $375 |
| R7-8 + R7-8a van-accessible pair on shared post | $275 to $525 |
| Existing-post sign refresh (no excavation) | $145 to $275 |
| Title 17 permit coordination (per project) | $400 to $850 |
| Full Portland 8-stall ADA sign refresh | $2,800 to $5,200 |
Current Market Reality
ASTM D4956 Type III sheeting carries 3 to 4 week lead times in the Pacific Northwest, and Type IV diamond grade can run 6 to 8 weeks on certain colors. Aluminum sign blanks rose 11 percent in 2025. Plan a 4 to 6 week lead time on any Portland ADA sign install where Title 17 permitting or Type IV sheeting is required.
What Should a Portland Property Manager Verify Before Closing an ADA Sign Install?
A defensible Portland ADA sign install gives the manager:
- ADA Standard 502.6 mounting-height verification with photo proof.
- R7-8a presence on every van-accessible stall.
- Title 33.266 sign-density verification for the lot configuration.
- Title 32 permit number on file where the sign is within 10 feet of public ROW.
- ASTM D4956 sheeting cert sheet on file matching the installed grade.
- GPS log of each installed sign with as-built date.
Without all six, the install is not finished from an ADA defensibility standpoint regardless of what is on the post.
Where Does This Sit in the Broader Cojo Sign Service in Portland?
ADA sign work runs alongside the rest of our Portland sign service. Compare options in our parking sign buyer's guide, review the federal spec in our ADA parking sign requirements reference, check the ADA mounting height reference, and see how ADA fits into broader Oregon law in ADA parking compliance Oregon. Our full Portland sign service is documented at Portland parking sign installation.
FAQ
Q: What is the legal mounting height for an ADA parking sign in Portland?
A: 60 inches minimum from finished pavement to the bottom of the lower sign on the post per ADA Standard 502.6. This applies in Portland on private and public property. Most accessibility flags during BDS review trace back to signs mounted at 48 to 54 inches by previous installers.
Q: Do all Portland accessible stalls need a van-accessible R7-8a plate?
A: Only stalls designated as van-accessible. ADA Standard 208.2.4 requires at least one in every six accessible spaces to be van-accessible, and that stall must carry the R7-8a plate. Standard accessible stalls do not need the R7-8a.
Q: Does Portland Title 17 require a sign permit on every ADA sign install?
A: Only where the sign sits within 10 feet of public right-of-way. Most ADA stalls deeper in private lots do not require Title 17 review. We confirm permit applicability per-stall on every Portland scoping call.
Q: Can Cojo handle BDS accessibility-flag remediation in Portland?
A: Yes. BDS accessibility flags on parking signage are a routine engagement for our crew. We coordinate the remediation scope, the Title 17 paperwork where applicable, and the photo-log documentation BDS uses to clear the flag.
Q: What's the typical lead time for a Portland ADA sign install?
A: 4 to 6 weeks from initial site walk to install completion. The two longest-lead items are ASTM D4956 sheeting fabrication (3 to 4 weeks for Type III, 6 to 8 weeks for Type IV) and Title 17 permit review (14 to 21 days where applicable). Emergency BDS-flag remediation can compress to 2 to 3 weeks.
Next Step
Cojo installs and refreshes ADA parking signs across Portland to ADA Standard 502.6 with R7-8 / R7-8a pairs, Title 17 permit support, and BDS accessibility coordination. Compare options in our best ADA parking signs roundup, or call to schedule an ADA sign site walk for your Portland property.