TL;DR
Line striping is the layout and painting of parking stalls, traffic arrows, fire lanes, and accessible-space markings on asphalt or concrete, usually as the final step after sealcoating cures. Crews use walk-behind striping machines with fast-dry waterborne or solvent traffic paint, holding standard dimensions such as 4-inch-wide lines and 9-by-18-foot stalls.
What it means
Line striping is the layout and painting of parking stalls, traffic arrows, fire lanes, and accessible-space markings on asphalt or concrete, usually as the final step after sealcoating cures. Crews use walk-behind striping machines with fast-dry waterborne or solvent traffic paint, holding standard dimensions such as 4-inch-wide lines and 9-by-18-foot stalls. ADA-compliant spaces, with access aisles and signage, are the detail most often missed on low bids.
Where it sits in the glossary
Line striping is part of the Trade jargon group inside the ProFix Directory glossary. Browse every term in this category from the glossary index.
Why Ohio homeowners should know it
This is a term Ohio homeowners encounter when reading contractor quotes, hiring paperwork, or inspection reports. Understanding it well enough to ask one good follow-up question is usually all the protection a homeowner needs.
ProFix Directory keeps definitions short on the index page and saves the longer context — Ohio-specific rules, where the term comes from, and which ProFix tools touch it — for these per-term pages so the term is easy to cite and easy to share.
ProFix tools that touch this term
See also
License: CC-BY-4.0 — quote freely with attribution to ProFix Editorial Team / ProFix Directory.