The first thing you notice at Holly Tree Village is how clearly the site “reads” now.
Parking, walkways, and entry routes feel organized, and the concrete work guides you where you need to go without confusion.
For a multifamily affordable housing community in Beaverton, OR, that matters every day, especially for residents and visitors who rely on accessible routes from the moment they step out of a vehicle.
At Wallace Construction, we recently completed site concrete and accessibility upgrades here, focused on sidewalks, patios, curbs, and ADA access features.
The goal was straightforward: make pedestrian circulation safer, smoother, and more compliant while refreshing common areas that residents actually use.
Making the Path From Parking to Entry Feel Effortless
In a large multifamily property, most foot traffic starts in the parking lot.
That meant our concrete sidewalks needed to connect parking areas to the main building entry in a way that felt direct and consistent. The finished site includes new or rebuilt concrete sidewalks that lead cleanly from parking zones to the covered main entrance, with coordinated grades so transitions feel steady underfoot.
A key piece of the upgrade was building a continuous pedestrian route through an active parking and drive lane environment.
Instead of leaving people to “find” the right way through, the completed layout makes the intended path obvious, with concrete flatwork around the main entry drop-off zone framed by curb lines that help define where vehicles stop and where people walk.
ADA Features That Do Their Job Quietly, Every Day
Accessibility details can feel small until you need them.
One of the clearest improvements at Holly Tree Village is the ADA curb ramp installed at a crossing point. It includes a yellow tactile warning surface with truncated domes at the ramp transition, providing detectable warnings where pedestrians move from the sidewalk to a vehicle zone.
Nearby, an accessible parking stall and access aisle are clearly marked adjacent to the pedestrian route, with the ADA symbol painted on the pavement. When accessible parking, curb ramps, and sidewalks line up properly, the whole site works better.
You get fewer awkward detours, fewer trip hazards, and a layout that supports residents with varying mobility needs.
Courtyard Concrete That Turns Into Usable Outdoor Space
Multifamily properties live or die by their common areas. Behind or between buildings at Holly Tree Village, we completed a concrete patio and courtyard slab that functions as residents’ outdoor space. In the finished setup, tables and umbrellas sit neatly on the slab, and the area looks ready for everyday use, from quick conversations to a sunny afternoon break.
Concrete is a practical choice here in Beaverton, where wet seasons can punish surfaces that trap water or degrade quickly. A clean, durable concrete slab helps keep shared spaces usable and easier to maintain throughout the year.
Courtyard Concrete That Turns Into Usable Outdoor Space
This type of work always comes down to coordination.
At Holly Tree Village, our concrete interfaces with existing asphalt parking and drive lanes, plus building entry thresholds. The photos show coordinated grades between asphalt, curb, and sidewalk for smoother transitions, which is exactly what you want in a resident-heavy environment.
Curbs along drive lanes and parking edges also help reinforce circulation, and you can see red painted curb sections that highlight areas where vehicles should not stop. When curbs, sidewalks, and markings work together, the site becomes calmer and safer.
People walk where they should, cars move where they should, and the entry approach stays clear.
Ready to Improve Access at Your Beaverton Property?
If you manage a multifamily property in Beaverton, OR and your sidewalks, curbs, or accessible routes feel patched together, we can help you tighten it up with durable site concrete and ADA-focused upgrades.
Reach out to schedule a site walk and get a clear plan for sidewalks, curb ramps, patios, and entry approaches that support safer circulation and stronger usability.







