



A lot of property owners don't realize their parking area is out of compliance until something forces the issue - an inspection, a complaint, or worse, a fine. That's exactly the kind of headache this client wanted to get ahead of. They needed their ADA parking area properly marked to meet current accessibility standards, and we came in to get it done right.
Here's what we were working with - a concrete surface that had the reserved signage in place but was missing the critical painted markings that actually make a space ADA compliant. No stall boundary, no access aisle hash marks, no ISA symbol. Signage alone doesn't cut it. The striping is what defines the space and communicates accessibility to drivers, inspectors, and the people who need it most.
We laid down a clean blue border around the reserved stall, painted the full hash-marked access aisle alongside it, and placed a crisp ISA wheelchair symbol directly in the stall. Every line is sized and positioned to meet ADA requirements. The access aisle hash marks are tight and consistent, the boundary lines run straight edge to edge, and the blue paint pops clearly against the light concrete surface.
This is one of those jobs that looks simple but carries real weight. Getting these details wrong - or skipping them entirely - opens a property owner up to ADA violation complaints and potential liability. Getting them right means the space is usable, safe, and legally sound. That matters for your customers, your visitors, and your peace of mind.
ADA compliance striping is a small piece of the bigger line striping picture, but it's one we take seriously. Whether it's a single reserved stall or a full parking lot layout, the same standard applies - clean lines, correct dimensions, done right the first time.