
Aurora is one of the most distinctive small towns in the Willamette Valley — a place where 1860s colony buildings sit alongside turn-of-the-century farmhouses and the occasional modern build tucked behind mature walnut trees along Ehlen Road.
With roughly a thousand residents and a deep streak of preservation pride, Aurora homeowners tend to care about how their properties look. The housing stock runs from board-and-batten originals in the Historic District to vinyl-clad ramblers on Broadacres and metal-roofed barns lining Airport Road. Willamette Valley humidity keeps moisture pressure constant from October through May, while summer sun bakes south-facing clapboard until the grain lifts. Lenny Martin Painting has handled every era of construction you’ll find here — from hand-scraping lead-safe prep on pre-1900 siding to spraying elastomeric coatings on newer HardiePlank.
Below you’ll find details on the three service areas we bring to Aurora: exterior painting that respects the town’s character, interior work tailored to older floor plans and modern additions alike, and commercial painting for the antique shops and small businesses along Main Street.
Aurora’s location in the northern Willamette Valley means persistent drizzle from fall through spring, followed by dry summers that push surface temperatures past 130 °F on dark-colored siding. Many homes in the Colony Historic District still wear original cedar lap siding that demands careful hand-prep — no aggressive pressure washing that could splinter century-old wood. Out along Boones Ferry Road and Butteville, you’ll find newer ranch-style homes where the challenge shifts to chalking vinyl and oxidized aluminum trim.
Our prep process starts with a full walk-around assessment. We scrape and sand loose paint by hand on historic wood, fill checks with flexible exterior filler, and spot-prime bare grain with oil-based primer before topcoating. For post-1980 homes with composite or fiber-cement siding, we power-wash at appropriate PSI, mask landscaping, and apply two coats of premium acrylic latex. Every Aurora project gets caulked joints, back-brushed surfaces, and a written scope so there are no surprises.
A properly prepped exterior in Aurora should hold eight to twelve years. The valley fog keeps UV exposure moderate compared to the Gorge, but moisture is relentless — that’s why we insist on quality primer and flexible topcoats that can expand with seasonal humidity swings.
Interior work in Aurora often means navigating tight hallways in 1900s-era cottages, working around built-in cabinetry in mid-century kitchens, or painting vaulted great rooms in newer Broadacres builds. We adjust our approach for each situation — brush-and-roll for detailed trim in older homes, spray-and-back-roll for large open walls where speed and uniformity matter.
The housing variety here is wider than people expect for a town of a thousand. You’ll find plaster-over-lath walls in the Historic District, textured drywall in 1970s ranch homes along Ehlen Road, and smooth Level 5 finishes in recent construction. Each surface calls for different primers and application techniques. We test adhesion on older plaster before committing to a system, and we skim-coat hairline cracks rather than papering over them.
Aurora homes lean toward muted heritage palettes — sage greens, warm creams, dusty blues — that complement the town’s antique-district character. For newer builds on the outskirts, warmer grays and off-whites open up smaller rooms without fighting the natural light filtering through valley overcast.
Aurora’s antique shops, cafes, and small retail spaces along Highway 99E are the town’s economic engine. Storefronts here need paint that holds up to foot traffic, road grime from the highway, and the expectations of visitors who come specifically for the charming streetscape. We work with business owners and the local historic overlay requirements to select colors and finishes that meet both aesthetic and regulatory standards.
Scheduling in Aurora’s commercial district is straightforward compared to larger cities, but we still coordinate around peak weekend antique-shopping traffic. Most exterior work happens Tuesday through Thursday to avoid disrupting Saturday crowds. Interior repaints are typically overnight or early-morning starts so shops can open on time.
Antique shops, art galleries, small cafes, agricultural supply buildings, professional offices along 99E, and rural event venues on the outskirts of town.
There are dozens of painters in Marion. The difference is in the prep, the communication, and whether they’ll still answer the phone a year from now.
Read what past clients have to say on our reviews page, or browse our project gallery to see recent work.
Whether you’re restoring a piece of Aurora Colony history or freshening up a newer home on Boones Ferry Road, Lenny Martin Painting brings thirty-plus years of local experience to every job. Call 503-888-8020 for a free estimate — we’ll come out, assess your surfaces, and give you an honest scope and price.