Ogden DOOH · Historic 25th Street · I-15 · Weber State · July 2026
Junction City, 88,000 people between the Wasatch peaks and the Great Salt Lake in a Weber County of 270,000, from Historic 25th Street and Union Station to I-15, Weber State and the Snowbasin gateway, bookable by the hour, priced per play, matched to how Ogden actually moves.

Ogden billboard and DOOH (digital out-of-home) costs span from a few cents per play on urban panels to premium Historic 25th Street, Riverdale Road retail and landmark networks. On Blindspot, Ogden screens are booked by the hour and priced per play, entry plays start around $0.28, with no contracts or minimums.
The smart Ogden play isn't one screen for a month. It's the right screens at the right hours: the arteries at commute peak, the malls through the afternoon, the nightlife and tourist cores after dark.
Billboard ranking points
Scored by Blindspot's location intelligence on visibility, dwell time, and footfall (directional, 1–10). Every one is bookable by the hour on the platform.
Historic 25th Street runs its brick storefronts from Union Station up toward the mountains, Ogden's restaurant, bar and festival strip with the Wasatch as a backdrop.
Interstate 15 carries the Wasatch Front commute and the Salt Lake-to-Idaho through traffic past Ogden's interchanges, the region's dominant vehicle counts.
Harrison Boulevard climbs the east bench past Weber State's campus, 30,000 students and the university district's daily flow.
Riverdale Road stacks the market's big-box retail and restaurant chains between I-15 and I-84, Weber County's default shopping strip.
Ogden Central Station puts FrontRunner rail, UTA buses and the junction-era Union Station museums at the foot of downtown.
The 12th Street route into Ogden Canyon funnels skiers and hikers toward Snowbasin, Powder Mountain and Pineview Reservoir every weekend.
The media estate · operator partners
Blindspot puts digital out-of-home (DOOH) and classic out-of-home from Ogden's media owners, Reagan Outdoor Advertising, YESCO Outdoor Media, Lamar Advertising among them, onto one map, bookable by the hour. Below: real partner screens across the city's prime zones.






Imagery from media-owner/operator partners. Locations indicative; live availability and per-screen pricing show in the platform.
Formats
From a highway bulletin to a single mall screen, Blindspot puts Ogden's digital out-of-home and classic OOH formats on one map, each priced per play and bookable by the hour. The formats that matter here:
Large-format LED on highways, bridges and boulevards, motion, dayparting and dynamic triggers.
Pedestrian-scale panels and citylights in high-footfall retail and downtown corridors.
Highway and arterial bulletins built for commuter frequency on the busiest routes.
High-intent shoppers from midday to evening across the city's retail destinations.
UTA buses and the FrontRunner commuter rail from Ogden Central Station plus stations and place-based screens with captive dwell.
Landmark and spectacular placements for brand statements in the city's signature locations.
Location insights
Ogden was the junction of the transcontinental railroad era, the town where the phrase you can't get anywhere without coming through Ogden was close to literal, and Union Station still anchors the bottom of Historic 25th Street's brick saloons-turned-restaurants. Weber State's 30,000 students climb the east bench, the I-15 corridor carries the Salt Lake commute south every morning, and on powder days the 12th Street canyon road funnels skiers to Snowbasin and Powder Mountain. The FrontRunner makes downtown Salt Lake 45 minutes away, and outdoor brands treat Ogden as their Wasatch basecamp. Buy the ski-season canyon runs and the 25th Street weekend nights.
I-15 Corridor and the main arteries surge 7:30–10 AM and 5–8 PM. Book exactly those hours and your frequency climbs for the same budget.
Riverdale Road retail and the city's malls hold heavy footfall from noon to evening, long windows where dwell and shopping intent, not rush, do the work.
Historic 25th Street shifts from daytime to social and tourism after dark. Different audience, same screens, swap the creative, not the location.
Location intelligence summary
Ogden doesn't have one rush hour; it has rotating audiences sharing the same streets. The only buying model that matches that is hourly: pay for the windows when your audience owns the city, skip the ones when it doesn't.
| Objective | Book these zones | Best hours |
|---|---|---|
| Brand launch | Historic 25th Street + I-15 Corridor | 6–11 PM |
| Commuter frequency | Weber State / Harrison Boulevard, I-15 Corridor | 7:30–10 AM · 5–8 PM |
| Retail foot traffic | Riverdale Road retail, Historic 25th Street | 12–8 PM |
| B2B / decision-makers | Union Station / Downtown core, I-15 Corridor | Weekdays 9 AM–6 PM |
| Tourism & events | Historic 25th Street, 12th Street / Canyon gateway | 10 AM–8 PM |
A month-long 24/7 rotation pays for 3 AM plays nobody sees. Hourly booking concentrates the same budget into Ogden’s proven peak windows, and typically saves 30%+ versus a flat four-week flight.
Morning commuters read in 2 seconds; evening crowds dwell for minutes. Run different creative by hour on the same screens, even trigger swaps on weather or live data.
Every play is logged. Blindspot campaigns report verified plays and attribution, measured against control groups, not estimated reach.
The zones above already draw a specific buyer: Hill Air Force Base contractors and suppliers, since Hill AFB is Utah's largest employer with about 27,000 military, civilian and contract personnel commuting the I-15 Corridor into Union Station / Downtown core (see DOOH for B2B), and outdoor recreation manufacturers headquartered right in Ogden, including Amer Sports' North American base and ENVE Composites' bike factory, both drawing on the Weber State / Harrison Boulevard talent pool.
Book Ogden by the hour →Cite this
Pricing · updated June 2026
Per-play prices, not CPM mysteries. Live per-screen pricing and real-time availability are on every card in the platform; the ranges below reflect typical Blindspot pricing as of June 2026.
| Format | Price per play | Typical presence | Why it works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Roadside & interstate digital | from ~$0.28 per play | $100 buys hourly bursts on I-15 and I-84 | Wasatch Front drive-time reach |
| 25th Street digital | from ~$0.44 per play | the historic dining strip | weekend and festival crowds |
| Riverdale retail digital | from ~$0.38 per play | the county's big-box mile | daily shopper flow |
| Campus-corridor digital | from ~$0.32 per play | Harrison Boulevard at Weber State | student and staff traffic |
| Transit and station screens | from ~$0.28 per play | Ogden Central and the UTA routes | rail and bus commuters |
No minimums · no contracts · pay per verified play · hourly scheduling per screen
Four things move the price on any Ogden screen: the format (pricing runs higher on transit and station screens than on roadside & interstate digital), the zone (Historic 25th Street carries the highest footfall premium), the daypart (peak commute and evening hours price above the overnight lull), and how far in advance you book, since the busiest zones and formats sell out first.
What a campaign costs
Because pricing is per play and hourly, there's no minimum, but here's what budgets realistically buy. Live numbers per screen are in the platform.
Commute test
A week of morning and evening bursts on I-15 and Riverdale Road.
Multi-zone Ogden push
25th Street, Riverdale and the I-15 corridor running together across peak dayparts.
Ski-season flagship
Full corridor saturation timed to the powder months and the canyon-road weekend waves.
FAQ
No. Blindspot books time on screens that are already installed and permitted by their media-owner operators, Reagan Outdoor Advertising, YESCO Outdoor Media, Lamar Advertising among them, so you're leasing airtime on an existing structure, not erecting a new one.
Specs vary by screen: orientation, resolution and file format differ from one panel to the next. Every screen shows its exact requirements in the platform before you upload, so there's no separate spec sheet to track down before you book.
Yes, on Blindspot every Ogden screen is bookable by the hour with no minimum contract, so you can buy only the commute peaks, shopping afternoons, or evening windows that match your audience.
Blindspot aggregates digital out-of-home inventory across Ogden onto one map, roadside and boulevard screens, transit, mall and place-based panels, bookable per play. The wider OOH supply is run by operators such as Reagan Outdoor Advertising, YESCO Outdoor Media, Lamar Advertising.
Often within hours: upload, pass creative pre-check, and digital screens need no printing or installation. Content approval typically averages around two business days across networks.
A multi-day hourly presence on a high-traffic I-15 Corridor corridor, a concentrated burst across the busiest transit and retail screens at peak hours, or thousands of plays on central urban panels.
No. Blindspot has no minimums, retainers or platform fees; you can run a focused hourly burst on a single screen or a full multi-zone Ogden campaign.
How to book
No sales calls, no contracts, self-serve from the map to live creative.
01
Open the map, filter Ogden by zone and format, and select the exact screens and the exact hours your audience is out.
02
Every screen shows its price per play and real-time availability before you commit. Build the plan; the running total is always visible.
03
Upload creative, pass pre-check, and go live, often within hours. Track verified plays and attribution as the campaign runs.
Keep exploring
Junction City. Your hour.
Pick the screens, pick the hours, see the price per play, live in hours.