When booking a hotel in Oklahoma City, proximity to Bricktown matters more than most guidebooks acknowledge. This article covers what the Best Western Plus Barsana delivers relative to comparable mid-range properties in the same district, what trade-offs you make by choosing this location, and how its pricing and amenities stack against alternatives within walking distance.
The Best Western Plus Barsana sits on North Broadway Avenue, placing it within the Bricktown entertainment district rather than in Midtown or near the airport. This is the primary reason to book here: you can walk to restaurants, bars, and the Bricktown Canal in under five minutes. Most travelers choosing Bricktown want evening access to dining and entertainment without a drive, and the Barsana's position delivers on that directly.
The distance matters for how you'll spend your evenings. The Bricktown district runs along the canal and several blocks of restored brick warehouses. The Bricktown Ballpark, home to the Oklahoma City Dodgers, is a ten-minute walk east. The Oklahom City Museum and the Bricktown Water Taxi embarkation point are similarly close. If you're staying for a Dodgers game or planning multiple nights in the district, the Barsana's location saves you repeated cab rides.
The trade-off: if you're primarily visiting the Oklahoma City National Memorial, the Stockyard City area south of I-40, or the Science Museum Oklahoma in Midtown, Bricktown is not centrally located. A hotel near Midtown on NW 23rd Street or near the airport corridor puts those destinations closer. But if Bricktown is your anchor, the Barsana's walkability is genuine.
Best Western Plus properties in Oklahoma City typically offer suite-style rooms with a separate living area and kitchenette, which sets them apart from standard hotel rooms at the same price point. The Barsana follows this pattern: rooms include a refrigerator, microwave, and small workspace. This appeals to families planning multi-night stays or business travelers who want to avoid eating every meal out. The kitchenette doesn't replace a full kitchen, but it handles light cooking and storage.
The property includes a complimentary hot breakfast, which reduces morning meal costs. A comparison point: hotels in the $80 to $120 per night range in Bricktown vary on breakfast. Some charge $8 to $12 per person for a continental spread; others include nothing. The Barsana's inclusion matters if you're traveling with children or prefer to eat before exploring.
The fitness center and indoor pool are standard for the Best Western Plus tier. The pool is smaller than at full-service hotels but adequate for an evening swim or entertaining children. Free Wi-Fi is included, along with parking. Parking at the Barsana is on-site, which differs from some Bricktown competitors where parking is street-only or requires a paid garage. This is particularly useful if you've rented a car for the day and want secure, included parking without adding $15 to $20 per night to your bill.
Room rates at the Barsana typically fall between $85 and $130 per night, depending on occupancy and season. Weekday rates in summer are often lower than weekend or event-driven rates. If the Oklahoma City Thunder have a home game at Paycom Center, or if a major event fills the convention center, all Bricktown properties raise rates; the Barsana is no exception.
For comparison, the Sheraton Oklahoma City Downtown and Renaissance Oklahoma City are in the same district but charge $140 to $200 per night for full-service amenities and larger rooms. The Barsana costs roughly 40 to 50 percent less while sacrificing a restaurant on-site and the staffing that comes with full-service hotels. A basic motel or budget chain in the same area might charge $60 to $80, but typically lacks the suite layout and breakfast.
The rate-to-value calculation depends on your priorities. If you want the lowest room cost and don't plan to spend much time in your room, a budget alternative makes sense. If you need a kitchenette, breakfast, and a pool, the Barsana's mid-range pricing is reasonable for the district.
Bricktown itself can be loud on Friday and Saturday nights, particularly near bars and restaurants. If you're light sleeper or traveling for quiet recovery time, the Barsana's location in the district, while convenient for nightlife, means ambient noise from nearby streets and venues. Request a room on an upper floor or facing away from Broadway if noise is a concern.
The property is aging. While Best Western Plus properties maintain consistent maintenance standards, the Barsana is not a new build. Rooms have been updated but lack the modern finishes of newer hotels. If you're comparing this to a recently opened property under a national brand, the Barsana's fixtures and finishes will feel dated.
Parking, while included, can be tight during peak occupancy. The lot is finite, so on busy weekends, spaces may be limited.
Choose this property if you're spending two or more nights in Bricktown and want walkable access to the district's restaurants and entertainment without the premium price of full-service hotels. It's also practical for families or longer stays because of the kitchenette. If your itinerary centers on OKC attractions outside Bricktown, a more centrally located hotel saves drive time and frustration.
The Barsana fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City's lodging landscape: affordable, well-located, and functional without pretense. It isn't the cheapest option, nor the most upscale, but it aligns cost with actual convenience for travelers whose plans align with Bricktown.
