Albany sits at the I-5 and Highway 20 interchange, which means the city's commercial parking sign work is dominated by truck-stop, distribution-center, and retail-corridor installs that few other cities at Albany's population see at the same density. The local code is straightforward, but the trucking-industry tenant base layers OSHA compliance and bollard-protection requirements onto most parking sign jobs.
Below is the working scope of an Albany sign install, the Linn County crossover we handle, the spec we default to, and what to expect on quote and lead time.
Quick Answer
Cojo installs parking signs across Albany and Linn County with full code coordination across Albany Municipal Code Title 7.36 (parking and traffic), the Albany sign permit process, the Oregon Building Code accessibility requirements, and the federal ADA Standards. We work with property managers, distribution centers along I-5 and Highway 20, healthcare facilities, retail centers, and truck-stop operators.
What Albany-Specific Codes Apply to Parking Sign Installation?
Albany's permit framework:
- Albany Municipal Code Title 7.36 (Parking and Traffic) governs parking lot regulations including signage at fire lanes and tow-away zones. The code is on the Albany municipal code page.
- Albany Development Code controls signage at the property-line interface.
- Albany Community Development Department reviews sign permit applications.
- Oregon Revised Statute 98.812 governs the tow-away language required for any private-property tow authorization.
- Linn County code applies on county-jurisdiction parking lots outside Albany city limits.
What Sign Categories Does Cojo Install in Albany?
Across our Albany service area we install all seven categories from our parking sign buyer's guide:
- ADA accessible (R7-8 / R7-8a) at the federal 60-inch mounting height
- Fire-lane signs IFC 503 compliant with ORS 98.812 tow language
- Truck-stop tenant-only signs with ORS 98.812 tow language and OSHA pedestrian routing
- Reserved tenant and visitor signs with custom legend
- EV charging stalls with R10-21 sheeting and ORS 98.812 tow plates
- Distribution-center loading dock signs with OSHA 1910.176 pedestrian routing
- Retail and downtown commercial frontage signs
What Albany Service Areas Does Cojo Cover?
Our parking sign installation crews work across the city of Albany and the Linn-Benton county metro:
- Albany neighborhoods: Downtown Albany, North Albany, South Albany, East Albany, West Albany, Industrial Park, Knox Butte, Lebanon Avenue corridor
- Linn County: Lebanon, Sweet Home, Brownsville, Lyons-Mehama, Tangent
- Adjacent service area: Corvallis (covered in dedicated Corvallis page)
How Cojo Approached a Real Example: 18,000 sq ft Truck Stop, Albany Industrial Park, February 2026
A truck-stop operator at the Albany Industrial Park called us in February 2026 to refresh the parking sign system after an OSHA visit and a state DOT compliance review. The site had:
- 56 standard parking stalls plus 24 long-haul truck stalls
- 3 ADA accessible stalls (existing, all flagged for non-compliance on mounting height and on access aisle width)
- 1 fire lane along the rear access road
- Mixed truck-passenger pedestrian routing across the parking-to-fueling-island walkway
- Faded ORS 98.812 tow signage missing the current tow contractor
Our scope across one extended weekend:
- 3 R7-8 / R7-8a ADA pair re-installs at compliant 60-inch mounting height
- 24 truck stall numbered signs with bollard protection
- 4 OSHA pedestrian-aisle separation signs at the parking-to-fueling crossing
- 6 fire-lane signs (IFC 503 compliant, with ORS 98.812 tow language)
- 4 R2-1 yard speed limit signs (5 mph)
- 2 R1-1 stop signs at the truck-approach intersection
- 1 ORS 98.812 entrance tow-away sign with the property's current tow contractor
Total install ran in the $9,500 to $12,500 range, consistent with the Industry Baseline Range for a 44-sign Albany truck-stop refresh.
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Cost |
|---|---|
| Standard parking sign on new post | $175 to $325 |
| Truck-stall numbered sign with bollard protection | $400 to $750 |
| ADA R7-8 / R7-8a pair on shared post | $275 to $525 |
| ORS 98.812 entrance tow-away sign | $225 to $425 |
| Albany sign permit coordination | $200 to $475 (per project) |
| Full Albany truck-stop sign install (35 to 50 signs) | $9,000 to $14,000 |
Current Market Reality
Aluminum sign-blank pricing rose 11 percent in 2025, bollard steel jumped 14 percent, and Albany sign permit reviews currently run 7 to 14 calendar days from submittal. Plan a 4 to 6 week lead time on a typical install and 6 to 8 weeks on truck-stop or distribution-center installs that include bollard fabrication.
What Materials Does Cojo Specify on Albany Installs?
Our Albany default specification:
- Sign blank: 0.080-inch aluminum minimum, alodine-treated.
- Sheeting: ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic minimum on every sign. Type IV diamond grade on any sign on the I-5 or Highway 20 frontage and at industrial-park truck approach intersections.
- Mounting: 2-inch galvanized round post or U-channel into a 12-inch concrete footing, set 24 inches deep.
- Bollard protection: Steel pipe bollards (4-inch schedule 40 minimum) at any sign within 8 feet of a truck-trailer turning radius. Routine at truck stops and Albany Industrial Park sites.
ASTM D4956 grades are calibrated to MUTCD §2A.08 retroreflectivity, available at mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov.
What Should an Albany Property Manager Verify Before Closing a Sign Job?
A defensible Albany sign install gives the manager:
- Albany sign permit number (where applicable) on file with the city.
- Title 7.36 compliance check on private-property tow signage density.
- ORS 98.812 compliance check with current tow contractor verified.
- ADA Standard 502.6 verification on every accessible-stall sign.
- OSHA 1910.176 compliance check on any truck-stop or distribution-center pedestrian-vehicle separation signage.
- Photo log with GPS for every installed sign.
- Material cert sheets for sheeting grade traceable to ASTM D4956.
FAQ
Q: Does Albany require sign permits for parking lot signs on private property?
A: For most signs visible from a public street or that involve a new post installation, yes, under the Albany Development Code. Signs deep in private parking lots without public-street visibility typically do not require permits. We confirm permit applicability site-by-site as part of every Albany scoping call.
Q: Are truck-stop sign installs different from typical commercial installs?
A: Yes. Truck-stop installs typically require bollard protection at signs within truck-trailer turning radius, OSHA-compliant pedestrian-vehicle separation signage at fueling-island and parking-to-fueling crossings, larger-scale stall numbering for long-haul truck stalls, and after-hours install windows that do not disrupt 24/7 fueling operations.
Q: How does I-5 and Highway 20 frontage affect sign sheeting requirements?
A: Signs visible from I-5 or Highway 20 frontage are typically specified with ASTM D4956 Type IV diamond-grade sheeting because of the higher reading distance and the speed of approaching vehicles. Standard private-property signs deep in the lot can use Type III sheeting.
Q: What's the typical lead time on an Albany truck-stop sign install?
A: 6 to 8 weeks from initial site walk to install completion is typical when bollard fabrication is part of scope. Standard commercial installs without bollard work close in 4 to 6 weeks. The longest-lead items are sheeting fabrication, bollard fabrication, and Albany permit review.
Q: Can Cojo handle 24/7 install windows for truck-stop and distribution sites in Albany?
A: Yes. We routinely run overnight installs at truck stops and 24/7 distribution centers along I-5 and Highway 20. These typically carry a 25 to 40 percent labor premium for after-hours windows.
Next Step
Cojo installs and refreshes parking signs across Albany and Linn County with full Title 7.36, ORS 98.812, ADA, and OSHA compliance where applicable. Compare options in our parking sign buyer's guide, or call to schedule a site walk.