This guide covers what you're actually getting at the Holiday Inn Bricktown, how its location and amenities compare to competing mid-range hotels in Oklahoma City, and whether the Bricktown address justifies your room rate. After reading, you'll know if this property fits your trip or if another neighborhood hotel serves your needs better.
The Holiday Inn Bricktown sits in Oklahoma City's most walkable entertainment district, a redeveloped warehouse area along the Bricktown Canal. That proximity to restaurants, bars, and the Bricktown Ballpark matters differently depending on your trip type. If you're attending a game, catching a show, or spending evenings on foot, the location saves you cab fare and parking fees. If you're driving to the Oklahoma City Museum of Art or Paseo Arts District, you're paying for location you won't use.
The canal itself is the district's defining feature: a quarter-mile pedestrian path with water taxis, outdoor dining, and year-round activity. Hotels here charge a premium for that access. The Holiday Inn's Bricktown placement puts you steps from the water without the luxury hotel prices of some competitors nearby. Room rates typically run $110 to $160 per night depending on season, with weekend rates climbing higher during summer and special events.
The Holiday Inn brand standard includes a business center, fitness facility, and complimentary Wi-Fi, which you'll find here. The Bricktown location differentiates it from Holiday Inns elsewhere in Oklahoma City (locations exist near the airport and in Midtown), but the property itself is not distinct in its offerings. An equivalent Holiday Inn in Midtown, three miles away, may run $20 to $40 less per night and sits closer to galleries and the Paseo District, though without the canal-side foot traffic.
If your priority is walkability to entertainment and dining, the Bricktown Holiday Inn competes directly with the Aloft OKC Bricktown and independently managed boutique hotels in the same district. The Aloft, part of Marriott's lifestyle line, appeals to younger travelers and typically costs $15 to $30 more, but offers a more contemporary aesthetic. Smaller properties in Bricktown sometimes undercut the Holiday Inn by $20 to $30 per night but lack the front-desk reliability and standardized amenities of a branded chain.
For families, the Bricktown Holiday Inn's pool is a draw, particularly in summer months. Nearby Springhill Suites on the north edge of downtown offers similar amenities at lower rates but requires a short drive to Bricktown restaurants and venues.
The hotel sits at the corner of Sheridan Avenue and Routh Drive, directly adjacent to the Bricktown Ballpark. Street parking fills quickly on game nights and weekends; the property has an on-site garage, a significant convenience in a district where independent parking lots charge $10 to $15 per day. Validate your parking during your stay to avoid paying the daily rate.
Check-in is standard (3 p.m.) but the front desk will hold luggage if you arrive early. Given Bricktown's popular weekend status, booking three to four weeks ahead for Friday or Saturday nights is practical; last-minute weekend availability often disappears.
The hotel includes a hot breakfast, a material difference from some competing properties that charge $12 to $15 extra. If you're planning to eat every meal out, this saves little; if you take breakfast in your room before exploring the city, it reduces daily costs noticeably.
Bricktown itself is small. You'll reach the outer edge of the district (roughly ten blocks) in a 15-minute walk. The restaurants, galleries, and retail within Bricktown stay open seasonally; verify hours online before arrival, particularly in winter months when some venues close Tuesday through Thursday. The canal hosts water taxi service during warmer months only, typically May through September.
Beyond Bricktown, downtown Oklahoma City is a 0.7-mile walk to the north, putting the Civic Center, Myriad Botanical Gardens, and Okla. City National Memorial within reasonable distance. The Arts District and Paseo, however, require a 2 to 3-mile drive; don't overestimate walkability beyond Bricktown proper.
The neighborhood itself is safe and well-lit after dark due to high foot traffic and canal-side activity, though Bricktown quiets considerably after 10 p.m. on weeknights.
Book the Bricktown Holiday Inn if you're attending an event at the Ballpark, spending multiple evenings in the district, or traveling with people who value not moving the car for dinner and drinks. The location genuinely saves time and money in those scenarios.
Skip it if you're primarily visiting museums, galleries, or the botanical gardens; you'll drive past this neighborhood once and not return. Similarly, if you're on a strict budget, a Holiday Inn near the airport or in Midtown saves $40 to $60 per night without sacrificing brand reliability.
For business travel, the Bricktown location is peripheral unless your meetings are downtown; the Midtown Holiday Inn or a property closer to the business district makes more logistical sense.
The real decision is whether you value sitting steps from the canal and evening activity enough to pay the Bricktown premium over a comparable property elsewhere in the city.
