Container Store operates one location in the Oklahoma City metro area, in the Nichols Hills Plaza shopping center on North Western Avenue. If you're stocking up on drawer dividers, clear bins, closet systems, or label makers, this guide explains what you're getting, how it compares to other local shopping routes, and whether the trip makes sense for your project.
The Container Store at Nichols Hills Plaza sits in an upscale retail pocket northwest of downtown, anchored by higher-end retailers and restaurants. The store carries the full Container Store product range: modular shelving, wardrobe organization systems, kitchen and pantry solutions, office filing and desk accessories, custom closet design services, and seasonal storage. The store also offers in-home design consultations, where a designer visits to assess your space and propose a system, typically at no initial charge though designs requiring purchase are the expected follow-up.
Most customers come for three categories. First, apartment dwellers and renters use the modular, non-permanent systems (freestanding shelves, over-the-door organizers, tension rods) that don't require installation and move when you do. Second, homeowners use Container Store for built-in closet systems and pantry redesigns, taking advantage of the design service to maximize awkward spaces. Third, small business owners and home office workers buy filing, desk organization, and labeling systems in bulk.
The Nichols Hills location is roughly 11,000 square feet, which is midsize for Container Store. This means you'll find the most popular items in stock, though custom closet components or specialty office systems may require ordering. Parking is straightforward and free in the shared plaza lot.
Container Store prices run 30 to 50 percent higher than big-box alternatives like Target or Walmart, which stock basic plastic bins and wire shelving. However, the gap matters only if you're buying simple commodities. A clear plastic storage bin costs $8 at Target and $12 at Container Store; the Container Store version often has reinforced corners and interlocking lids, but the difference is incremental for someone storing seasonal clothing.
Where Container Store pulls ahead is in customization and density of options. If you need a five-tier pull-out pantry system for a 36-inch-wide cabinet, Container Store carries seven variants; Target carries one. If you're designing a walk-in closet from scratch, Container Store's design service and modular rod-and-shelf systems beat assembling generic pieces from hardware stores or unboxing flatpack furniture from Swedish retailers.
The pricing logic works like this: go to Container Store for anything requiring measurement, space optimization, or coordinated systems. Go to Target or Walmart for individual bins, bags, or straightforward shelving. For office supplies specifically, local independent office furniture dealers in Oklahoma City's Midtown and Bricktown districts sometimes undercut Container Store on filing cabinets and desk systems, but they don't stock the smaller organizing accessories.
The in-home consultation at the Nichols Hills location is the biggest differentiator from online ordering. A designer listens to your problem (I can't find anything in my pantry; my bedroom closet can't fit another hanger; my home office is paperwork chaos), measures your space, and proposes a solution with pricing. You're not obligated to buy, but you're also not paying upfront for advice. The service works best for people with structural problems (a closet that doesn't match standard rod-and-shelf kits, a pantry with odd shelving depths) or for those buying multiple systems at once, where coordination matters.
The trade-off is time. A consultation takes 2 to 3 weeks to schedule and the designer visit itself runs 45 minutes to an hour. If you need something next weekend, this path doesn't work. If you have a three-month renovation timeline and want professional-grade results, it does.
Container Store's website offers the same inventory as the Nichols Hills store, plus special-order items. Shipping is free on orders over $100; otherwise it's $6 to $10. If you're buying three or more items, the free-shipping threshold is usually hit, making online purchase cheaper than driving to Nichols Hills. The advantage of the physical store is seeing drawer depth and bin transparency in person before committing, trying a shelf system to confirm it fits your space, and walking out the same day instead of waiting 3 to 5 business days.
The physical location also stocks seasonal overflow: back-to-school desk organizers in August, holiday decoration storage in October, small-space solutions and closet refresh systems in January. These sell faster online, so if you're after a specific seasonal item, calling ahead to confirm stock (405-843-7700) is smarter than driving.
For furniture-scale storage like credenzas, filing walls, or entertainment center organizers, rooms + collections in Bricktown carries modern storage pieces that complement Container Store's smaller accessories. For closet rods, shelving brackets, and raw materials, Home Depot on N. Western Avenue (same corridor as Container Store, about 2 miles south) stocks contractor-grade metal and wood at lower price points but without the design-forward finishing.
For office filing and desk organization specifically, local independent office furniture dealers clustered near Midtown can often source commercial-grade cabinets, rolling carts, and desk dividers at volume discounts that beat retail pricing, though they require bulk order minimums.
Go to Container Store for a closet redesign, a pantry system requiring measurement and custom components, or a coordinated home office setup where you want pieces that match. Use the in-home design service if your space is irregular or you're solving a problem that feels stuck. Order online if you're buying basics and can wait for shipping. Skip the drive if you need something today and Target or Walmart carries a passable version. The Nichols Hills location makes sense as a destination for a specific project, not as a browsing stop.
