ADA Parking Lot Striping
In Ogden, UT
ADA Compliant Parking Spaces, Access Aisles, and Unloading Zones
1-800-STRIPER provides ADA-compliant parking lot striping in Ogden, UT — installing accessible spaces, van-accessible stalls, access aisles, ISA symbols, and required signage per the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design and Utah R156-56 accessibility provisions.
1-800-STRIPER® of Ogden PROVIDes ADA Compliance Services NEAR YOU
Need to make your property more accessible?
Upgrade your facility to become fully ADA compliant by partnering with us to create clear, accessible parking for all your visitors.
Our ADA Compliant line striping services include:
ADA Parking Lot Striping in Ogden, UT
The Americans with Disabilities Act requires ADA-compliant striping on any parking facility serving the public. The 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design are the federal rule, enforced by the Department of Justice and incorporated into Utah R156-56. They set every specification an Ogden commercial property has to meet: how many accessible spaces, how wide, which ones are designated van-accessible, what symbols and signage go up, and what the path from stall to entrance looks like.
1-800-STRIPER of Ogden handles full ADA compliance striping, from verifying your existing layout against current standards to marking accessible stalls, access aisles, ISA symbols, and R7-8 signage. Proactive compliance is faster and less expensive than defending a complaint after one has been filed.
ADA Accessible Space Requirements
The 2010 ADA Standards set minimum accessible-space counts based on total lot size. Ogden retail centers like Newgate Mall, Riverdale Plaza, and Station Park Farmington follow the same federal count as any commercial lot nationwide.
| Total parking spaces | Min ADA stalls | Min van-accessible |
|---|---|---|
| 1–25 | 1 | 1 |
| 26–50 | 2 | 1 |
| 51–75 | 3 | 1 |
| 76–100 | 4 | 1 |
| 101–150 | 5 | 1 |
| 151–200 | 6 | 1 |
| 201–300 | 7 | 2 |
| 301–400 | 8 | 2 |
| 401–500 | 9 | 2 |
| 501–1,000 | 2% of total | 1 per 6 accessible spaces |
| 1,001+ | 20 plus 1 per 100 over 1,000 | 1 per 6 accessible spaces |
At least one of every six accessible spaces (or fraction thereof) must be designated van-accessible.
Van-Accessible Requirements
Van-accessible spaces accommodate wheelchair ramps and side-mounted lifts, so they need additional width either in the stall or the access aisle. Two layouts satisfy the 2010 ADA Standards:
- Wide stall layout: 11-foot-wide parking stall with a 5-foot access aisle
- Wide aisle layout: 8-foot-wide parking stall with an 8-foot access aisle
Both configurations let a side-mounted wheelchair ramp deploy fully. Van-accessible stalls also require a “Van Accessible” plaque mounted below the R7-8 reserved-parking sign; the sign itself must sit at minimum 60 inches from the ground to the bottom of the sign so it stays visible when a vehicle occupies the stall.
Our ADA Compliance Process
Every ADA parking lot striping project in Ogden runs through six steps:
- On-site measurement. We verify stall width, access-aisle width, and running slope against current ADA limits: 8-foot stalls with 5-foot aisles for cars, 8-foot aisles or 11-foot stalls for vans, running slope no steeper than 1:48 in any direction.
- Accessible-route audit. We confirm the path from each accessible stall to the building entrance meets clear-width and slope requirements. A compliant stall opening onto a non-compliant route is still a failure.
- Count verification. We check the accessible-space count against the 2010 Standards table above and confirm van-accessible ratios.
- Marking application. We stripe diagonal-hatched access aisles in contrasting paint, stencil the International Symbol of Accessibility (ISA) in the stall, and repaint worn border lines.
- Signage installation. R7-8 signs go up at 60-inch mounting height with “Van Accessible” plaques on van-designated stalls. Posts anchor below the Northern Utah frost line (30-36 inches) so they survive freeze-thaw.
- Compliance sign-off. We leave a written scope summary that identifies each marking and the ADA citation it maps to. Property managers keep the document for future inspections.
For a full list of our pavement marking services, visit our all Ogden parking lot services page.
Businesses We Serve
How it Works
GET A FREE ESTIMATE
Contact us today and we’ll have a quote to you in 24 hours
SCHEDULE AN INSTALLATION
We’ll have your installation scheduled in less than 7 days, without affecting your business hours
GET A PARKING LOT THAT POPS
For a budget-friendly price, you’ll get a parking lot that looks like new!
We proudly work with:
We proudly work with:
Frequently Asked Questions About ADA Parking Lot Striping in Ogden, UT
What does ADA-compliant parking lot striping require in Utah?
ADA-compliant parking lot striping in Utah must meet the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design, which specify minimum accessible space counts by lot size, van-accessible space ratios (at least 1 in 6), stall widths (8 feet minimum for cars, 11 feet or 8-foot access aisle for vans), access aisle widths, ISA symbol placement, and required signage including the R7-8 reserved-parking sign. Utah R156-56 and Ogden City building code incorporate these federal requirements for commercial properties.
How many ADA parking spaces does my Ogden parking lot need?
The required number depends on your lot size per the 2010 ADA Standards table. Lots with 1–25 spaces need 1 accessible stall; 26–50 need 2; 51–75 need 3; 76–100 need 4; 101–150 need 5; 151–200 need 6; 201–300 need 7; 301–400 need 8; 401–500 need 9. At least one of every six accessible spaces, or fraction thereof, must be designated van-accessible. Ogden retail centers like Newgate Mall and Station Park Farmington follow this same federal count.
What is the difference between an ADA space and a van-accessible space?
A standard ADA parking space is 8 feet wide with a 5-foot access aisle. A van-accessible space is either 11 feet wide with a 5-foot access aisle, or 8 feet wide with an 8-foot access aisle — both configurations let wheelchair ramps or lifts deploy fully. Van-accessible stalls also require a “Van Accessible” plaque beneath the R7-8 reserved-parking sign. At least one van-accessible space per six ADA spaces is required in every Ogden commercial lot.
Can an Ogden property be penalized for non-compliant ADA striping?
Yes. The Americans with Disabilities Act allows federal enforcement by the Department of Justice as well as civil suits from private plaintiffs. Non-compliant ADA parking lot striping in Ogden exposes property owners to federal liability, state Building Code enforcement, and potential litigation. Beyond legal risk, visibly faded or incorrectly sized accessible markings send a message to disabled customers that your property isn’t welcoming. Proactive compliance is faster, simpler, and less expensive than defending a complaint.
How often should ADA striping be repainted in Northern Utah?
ADA parking lot striping in Ogden should be refreshed every 12 to 18 months — the same cadence as general restriping, sometimes sooner in high-salt winters. Faded blue ISA symbols, worn white stall borders, or peeled diagonal access-aisle hatching are signals that the lot is out of compliance. Restriping ADA markings during routine lot maintenance keeps your property inspection-ready year-round.
Does ADA striping apply to gravel parking lots in Utah?
Partially. Gravel, grass, and other unpaved parking surfaces can’t hold paint reliably, so ADA compliance on those surfaces relies on posted signage and physical accessibility rather than striped markings. Any accessible parking space on unpaved surfaces must still meet the 2010 ADA Standards for stall and access-aisle width, cross slope, and route to the building entrance. For event overflow or construction-staging lots, temporary markings can help designate accessible spaces. —