A parking sign install looks straightforward until it has to clear ADA Standard 502.6, MUTCD §2A.18, the local frost depth, and the property manager's expectation that the post will not lean after the first freeze. The difference between a sign that survives 10 years and a sign that has to be redone in 18 months is mostly in the footing and the mounting height. This guide walks through the install step-by-step at the spec we use on every Cojo job, using ASTM D4956 Type III sheeting on a 0.080-inch aluminum blank with a 2-inch galvanized round post into a 24-inch concrete footing.
Quick Answer
Installing a parking sign to ADA Standard 502.6 takes 60 to 90 minutes per sign with two crew members. Set the bottom of the lower sign at 60 inches above finished pavement. Anchor a 2-inch galvanized round post in a 12-inch diameter concrete footing 24 inches deep to clear the PNW frost line. Use 0.080-inch aluminum blanks with ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic sheeting, mount with tamper-proof Torx-pin hardware, and verify with photo log and GPS before closing the install. Tools list, time estimate, and code citations below.
What Tools and Materials Does a Parking Sign Install Need?
Required tools and materials for a single sign install:
- 0.080-inch aluminum sign blank (12 inches by 18 inches standard)
- ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic sheeting (printed sign face)
- 2-inch galvanized round post or 2-inch by 2-inch U-channel post, 8 to 10 feet length
- Tamper-proof sign hardware (Torx-pin or one-way bolts)
- 60 lb bag of concrete mix (1.5 to 2 bags per footing)
- 12-inch diameter sonotube or earth-form footing
- Post hole digger or two-person auger
- Level and tape measure
- Mixing tub and water source
- Safety cones and high-visibility vest
Optional but recommended:
- Concrete vibrator or rebar for tamping
- GPS-enabled phone for as-built logging
- Anti-graffiti laminate (street-facing signs)
What Code References Govern Parking Sign Installation?
Three federal references plus state law:
- ADA Standard 502.6 sets the 60-inch minimum mounting height for accessible-stall signs on private and public property. Reference at the U.S. Access Board.
- MUTCD §2A.18 sets the 7-foot minimum mounting height for signs on public roadway right-of-way. Available at mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov.
- MUTCD §2A.08 governs retroreflective sheeting requirements aligned with ASTM D4956 grades.
- Oregon Revised Statute 98.812 governs the tow-away authorization language required on private-property tow signs. Available at oregonlegislature.gov.
Different sign types and locations trigger different references. ADA stalls hit 502.6. Public-ROW frontage signs hit MUTCD §2A.18. Private-property tow signs hit ORS 98.812.
Step 1: Verify Sign Location and Local Code
Before excavating, verify three things at the install location:
- The sign category and the corresponding code reference (ADA, MUTCD, ORS 98.812).
- The local jurisdiction permit requirement. Portland Title 32 applies within 10 feet of public ROW. Most other Oregon cities have similar setback-triggered permit thresholds.
- The underground utility locate. Call 811 at least 48 hours before excavation in Oregon. Free locate at oregonutilitynotificationcenter.org.
Skipping the locate call and hitting a buried utility is the most common avoidable failure on a parking sign install.
Step 2: Mark and Excavate the Footing
Mark the post centerline. Excavate a 12-inch diameter hole 24 inches deep using a post hole digger or two-person auger. The 24-inch depth clears the PNW frost line in most of Oregon; verify against the local building department for elevation-driven exceptions.
A shallow footing under 18 inches will frost-heave the post within the first winter. A footing wider than 12 inches wastes concrete without meaningful stability gain on a 2-inch post.
Step 3: Set the Post and Pour the Footing
Drop the 2-inch galvanized post into the hole. Brace it plumb with two stakes and a level. Mix one to two 60-lb bags of concrete to a workable consistency and pour around the post, agitating with a piece of rebar to release voids. Crown the top of the footing slightly above grade to shed water.
Allow the footing to set for at least 4 hours before mounting the sign. In cold or wet conditions, extend the cure time to 24 hours before applying any mounting load.
Step 4: Mount the Sign at the Code-Specified Height
Measure from finished pavement to the bottom of the lower sign on the post:
- 60 inches minimum for ADA accessible-stall signs per ADA Standard 502.6.
- 84 inches minimum for vehicle-traffic-only signs in private lots (Cojo standard).
- 7 feet minimum for signs in public-roadway right-of-way per MUTCD §2A.18.
Attach the sign to the post with two tamper-proof Torx-pin or one-way bolts. Tighten until the sign is flat against the post; over-torquing distorts the aluminum blank.
Step 5: Verify and Document the Install
Before closing the install, verify and log:
- Mounting height with tape measure (photograph with the tape in frame).
- Sign legend matches the spec on the work order.
- Footing crown sheds water away from the post.
- Hardware is tamper-proof (Torx-pin or one-way bolts).
- GPS coordinates of the post.
- Photo log: 4 photos minimum (north, south, east, west) plus the height-verification shot.
Without the documented verification, the install is not finished from a defensibility standpoint regardless of how good the post looks.
What Cojo Does on a Real Portland Install
On a 14,500 sq ft mixed-use building in Northeast Portland in March 2026, our crew installed 15 parking signs across one Saturday using this exact process. Each sign install averaged 75 minutes from excavation to verified close-out. Of the 15 posts, 12 cleared concrete cure in 6 hours and 3 needed a Sunday return after an overnight rain extended the cure window. Total install ran in the Industry Baseline Range of $175 to $325 per standard sign on new post.
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Cost |
|---|---|
| Standard parking sign on new post (DIY materials) | $85 to $145 |
| Standard parking sign on new post (installed by crew) | $175 to $325 |
| ADA R7-8 + R7-8a pair installed | $275 to $525 |
| Existing-post sign refresh (no excavation) | $135 to $245 |
| Footing concrete + sonotube (per post) | $25 to $50 |
Current Market Reality
ASTM D4956 Type III sheeting carries 3 to 5 week lead times in the Pacific Northwest. Galvanized post stock has tightened in 2025 with 1 to 2 week regional lead times on 2-inch round. 60-lb concrete bags are spot-priced regionally; budget volatility is mostly upstream of the install crew. Plan a 4 to 6 week lead time from sign order to install close-out.
Where Does This Sit in the Broader Cojo Sign Service?
Sign installation is the operational core of our sign service. Compare specs in the parking sign buyer's guide, check the ADA mounting height reference, see the deeper sign post anchoring guide, and review pricing in sign post installation cost. Our city service in Portland is at Portland parking sign installation. Striping pairs naturally with sign work in commercial parking lot striping.
FAQ
Q: How deep does a parking sign post footing need to be in Oregon?
A: 24 inches minimum to clear the PNW frost line in most of Oregon. Higher-elevation jurisdictions (Bend, La Grande, etc.) may require deeper footings; verify against the local building department. Footings shallower than 18 inches will frost-heave within the first winter.
Q: What is the legal mounting height for an ADA parking sign?
A: 60 inches minimum from finished pavement to the bottom of the lower sign on the post per ADA Standard 502.6. This applies on private and public property. Most accessibility flags trace back to signs mounted at 48 to 54 inches by previous installers.
Q: Do I need an underground utility locate before excavating?
A: Yes. Oregon law requires a free utility locate via 811 at least 48 hours before excavation. Skipping the locate and hitting a buried utility is the most common avoidable failure on a parking sign install.
Q: How long does the concrete footing need to cure before mounting the sign?
A: 4 hours minimum at typical conditions, 24 hours in cold or wet weather. Mounting on a green footing distorts the post position before the concrete sets. We schedule sign mounting on a Saturday-pour, Sunday-mount cadence on most Cojo installs.
Q: Can I reuse an existing post when replacing a damaged sign?
A: Yes if the post is plumb, the footing is intact, and the post is the correct height for the new sign category. If the existing post was set for a non-ADA sign and you are upgrading to an R7-8 ADA pair, the post may be too short to clear the 60-inch ADA mounting height. Verify before reusing.
Next Step
Cojo installs parking signs across Oregon to ADA Standard 502.6, MUTCD §2A.18, and ORS 98.812. Compare options in our parking sign buyer's guide, or call to schedule a sign install scoping for your property.