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Painting lines on a gravel parking lot?

materthegreater

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2012
Messages
683
Location
VT
I'm trying to control parking in a small church parking lot. People come in and park in random places so there ends up being a lot of wasted space. I want to try to paint lines but I'm not sure of the best way to do that on gravel. I could just use regular striping paint but I'm not sure that it would last very long.

Any suggestions? Has anyone done this sort of thing before? The lot has just been graded and well compacted so there is no loose stone, just hard packed smooth gravel for the most part.
 

Acoals

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Dec 15, 2019
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Wisconsin
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Jack of all trades/Master of none
Good luck with that . . . lines will help, but somebody will still park wonky, and then everybody else will follow. About the only way to make people park right is to stand out there and park them as they come in.
 

OzDozer

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Jan 18, 2007
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2,207
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Perth, Western Australia.
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Semi-Retired ..
Here's one idea ...


Another idea is to bury painted bricks or pavers - or even colored glass bottles (bottom facing up) - at regular distances to indicate lines.

Then make sure you put up a sign saying those who don't keep inside the lines, are on the broad path that leads to destruction ..... :D
 

excavator

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Oct 16, 2006
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1,450
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Pacific North West
I deal with the same thing at our church. I took 2 1x4s and screwed them together about 3 inches apart and the appropriate length. I lay that on the gravel and use upside down stripping paint. On crushed gravel the lines are very visible for about 2-3 months and slowly fade, so I redo them about twice a year. Not ideal but it works.
 

CM1995

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Jan 21, 2007
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13,429
Location
Alabama
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Running what I brung and taking what I win
Put parking curbs in and/or find some junk telephone poles

Beat me to it. You should be able to get old power poles from your local power co. Arrange them the way you want them to park and paint lines on the poles marking the spaces. Not a total solution but cheap and easy start.

There's a more expensive option that I saw on a parking lot we bid a couple of months ago. About 100 spaces in a rectangle with a bio-swale in the middle where the entire lot drained to. The surface was designed as all gravel with concrete parking bumpers and IIRC PT YP 4x6's buried in order to mark the spaces off.
 

631G

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Joined
Apr 27, 2008
Messages
336
Location
Georgia
Occupation
Civil Superintendent
The last power job I was on we had a similar problem. Because of snow plowing etc. we wound up using steel T posts and yellow rope to create the main lines to generally keep people straight. Didn’t solve the issue of people parking on a skew but it did help to get better utilization of the space we had.
 

materthegreater

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2012
Messages
683
Location
VT
Thanks for all the ideas! Can't do anything buried in because of plowing (unless I want to take them out and put them in every year).

The permeable paver setup looks pretty cool.
 

chidog

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 21, 2021
Messages
807
Location
kent, wa
How about the good old marking paint, like locators use? I even have a can of white that comes in handy at times.
 

JaredV

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 22, 2022
Messages
350
Location
SW WA
Cut conveyor belt into strips, paint 'em white and spike down on both ends? Only thing is it might be a tripping hazard for the old folks.
 

HarleyHappy

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 30, 2020
Messages
490
Location
So NH
Occupation
Welder/Mechanic
At work we gave up on the spray painting floors and went to adhesive nylon tape.
While the adhesive wouldn’t work well with gravel, you could use nylon cap nails but would probably be a tire hazard.
What about red heads, we use them building gravel roads for grade.
They are very durable.
Not sure what the correct name is for them.
They look like red brush tips you nail in the gravel and stick up.
 
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