Bend's parking sign work is shaped by two unusual factors: high winter snow accumulation that buries 60-inch ADA signs by January, and a heavy mix of resort, hospitality, and tourism-driven retail that needs visitor-friendly wayfinding in addition to standard tenant restrictions. Property managers used to Willamette Valley sign packages routinely under-mount their ADA stalls in Bend and discover the signs disappear under snow piles. Property managers used to retail signage downstate routinely under-sign visitor parking and watch their tourist customers park in tenant stalls.
Read on for our Bend scope of work, the snow-zone mounting we default to, the deeper frost-line footings we spec for Central Oregon, and the lead times we hold to.
Quick Answer
Cojo installs parking signs across Bend, Redmond, and Deschutes County with full code coordination across Bend Development Code Chapter 3.3 (parking and signage), the federal ADA Standards (with snow-zone mounting adaptations), and ORS 98.812 tow-away authorization. We work with property managers, resort and hospitality properties, healthcare facilities, retail centers, and the Old Mill and downtown commercial districts.
What Bend-Specific Codes Apply to Parking Sign Installation?
Bend's permit and code framework:
- Bend Development Code Chapter 3.3 (Vehicle Access and Parking) governs parking lot design including signage at fire lanes and accessible spaces. The full code is on the City of Bend code page.
- Bend Development Code Chapter 4 (Sign Code) controls signage at the property-line interface and on public ROW.
- Bend Community Development reviews sign permit applications.
- Oregon Revised Statute 98.812 governs the tow-away language required for any private-property tow authorization.
- Deschutes County code applies on county-jurisdiction parking lots outside Bend city limits.
- Snow-zone considerations: Not a code per se, but a practical adaptation to ADA Standard 502.6 that Bend property managers should specify.
What Sign Categories Does Cojo Install in Bend?
Across our Bend service area we install all seven categories from our parking sign buyer's guide:
- ADA accessible (R7-8 / R7-8a) at adapted snow-zone mounting heights (typically 84 inches to bottom-of-sign in Central Oregon)
- Fire-lane signs IFC 503 compliant with ORS 98.812 tow language
- HOA and condo tenant-only signs with ORS 98.812 tow language
- Reserved tenant and visitor signs with custom legend, including resort and short-term-rental signage
- EV charging stalls with R10-21 sheeting and ORS 98.812 tow plates
- Tourism and downtown wayfinding signs at retail centers and Old Mill District
- Resort and hospitality property signage including valet zones and overnight tow-away
What Bend Service Areas Does Cojo Cover?
Our parking sign installation crews work across the city of Bend and Deschutes County:
- Bend neighborhoods: Downtown Bend, Old Mill District, Westside, Eastside, Northeast Bend, Northwest Crossing, Awbrey Butte, Tetherow, Mountain View, Brookswood, Bend River Promenade
- Deschutes County: Redmond, Sisters, Sunriver, La Pine, Tumalo
- Adjacent service area: Where applicable, Madras and Prineville
How Cojo Approached a Real Example: 24,000 sq ft Hospitality Mixed-Use, Old Mill District, January 2026
A property manager overseeing a 24,000 sq ft mixed-use building in the Old Mill District called us in January 2026 to refresh the parking sign system after the winter season made the existing 60-inch-mount ADA signs invisible under snow. The site had:
- 78 parking stalls split across 1 hospitality tenant (boutique hotel) and 6 ground-floor retail tenants
- 4 ADA accessible stalls (existing, mounted at 60 inches and buried under January snow piles)
- 8 valet zone stalls
- 6 EV charging stalls
- 1 fire lane along the rear access drive
- ORS 98.812 tow signage that was current but at insufficient density
Our scope across one weekend window between storms:
- 4 R7-8 / R7-8a ADA pair re-installs at adapted 84-inch mounting height
- 8 valet zone signs ("VALET ZONE - HOTEL VEHICLES ONLY")
- 6 R10-21 EV stall signs with ORS 98.812 tow-away plates
- 1 ORS 98.812 entrance tow-away sign
- 8 in-lot tow-away repeaters per Chapter 3.3 sight-line density
- 4 fire-lane signs (IFC 503 compliant)
- 6 retail tenant wayfinding signs
- 4 visitor parking stall signs with 4-hour limit
Total install ran in the $9,500 to $12,500 range, consistent with the Industry Baseline Range for a 41-sign Bend hospitality refresh.
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Cost |
|---|---|
| Standard parking sign on new post | $175 to $325 |
| ADA R7-8 / R7-8a pair at adapted snow-zone height | $325 to $625 |
| ORS 98.812 entrance tow-away sign | $225 to $425 |
| Bend sign permit coordination | $300 to $700 (per project) |
| Full Bend hospitality sign install (30 to 45 signs) | $9,000 to $14,000 |
Current Market Reality
Aluminum sign-blank pricing rose 11 percent in 2025, Bend Community Development sign permit reviews run 10 to 18 calendar days, and the Bend winter install window is constrained by snow events. Plan a 4 to 6 week lead time on a typical install, and book installs in spring or early fall for the easiest installation conditions.
What Materials Does Cojo Specify on Bend Installs?
Our Bend default specification:
- Sign blank: 0.080-inch aluminum minimum, alodine-treated. Bend's freeze-thaw cycles eat plastic signs faster than the rest of Oregon.
- Sheeting: ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic minimum on every sign. Type IV diamond grade on any tourism-area or downtown sign.
- Mounting: 2-inch galvanized round post or U-channel into a 12-inch concrete footing, set 36 inches deep (longer than Willamette Valley standard) to clear Central Oregon frost depth.
- Adapted mounting height for snow-zone ADA signs: Bottom of sign at 84 inches above the finished surface, exceeding the federal 60-inch minimum, to remain visible above typical winter snow accumulation.
ASTM D4956 grades are calibrated to MUTCD §2A.08 retroreflectivity, available at mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov.
What Should a Bend Property Manager Verify Before Closing a Sign Job?
A defensible Bend sign install gives the manager:
- Bend Community Development sign permit number (where applicable) on file.
- Chapter 3.3 compliance check on private-property tow signage density.
- ORS 98.812 compliance check with current tow contractor verified.
- ADA Standard 502.6 verification with snow-zone mounting adaptation documented.
- Photo log with GPS for every installed sign.
- Material cert sheets for sheeting grade traceable to ASTM D4956.
- Post-depth verification (36-inch footings for Central Oregon frost line).
FAQ
Q: Why does Bend require taller mounting heights for ADA parking signs?
A: ADA Standard 502.6 sets a 60-inch minimum from finished surface to bottom of sign. In Bend's snow accumulation pattern, a 60-inch sign can be buried under January snow piles, making the accessible stall effectively unmarked during winter. We routinely install ADA signs at 84 inches to bottom-of-sign in Bend to maintain visibility year-round. The federal minimum is preserved; the practical visibility requirement drives the upgrade.
Q: Does Bend require a sign permit for parking lot signs on private property?
A: For most signs visible from a public street or that involve new post installation, yes, under Bend Development Code Chapter 4. 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 Bend scoping call.
Q: How does Bend frost depth affect sign post installation?
A: Bend's frost line runs 30 to 36 inches at most installation sites, deeper than the 24-inch standard for Willamette Valley installs. Sign posts set at 24 inches in Bend will heave with freeze-thaw cycles within 2 to 3 winters. Our default Bend specification uses 36-inch concrete footings to keep posts plumb.
Q: What's the best time of year for a Bend sign install?
A: Late spring through early fall is the easiest installation window. Winter installs are possible between storm events but carry weather-delay risk and typically run 25 to 40 percent above summer pricing because of weather-window labor premiums. Schedule sign refreshes for May through October when possible.
Q: How do tourism-driven retail and hospitality sites differ from standard commercial signage?
A: Tourism-driven sites need more visitor wayfinding signage, more visible ADA signage at the property-line interface, and larger-format directional signs that read at the longer approach distances typical of resort and Old Mill District traffic. Standard commercial signage assumes the parker is a familiar tenant or employee; tourism signage assumes first-time visitors.
Next Step
Cojo installs and refreshes parking signs across Bend and Deschutes County with full Chapter 3.3, ORS 98.812, ADA compliance (with snow-zone adaptations), and tourism-area wayfinding scoping. Compare options in our parking sign buyer's guide, or call to schedule a site walk.