Another Time Antique Mall is a multi-dealer indoor marketplace specializing in vintage furniture, mid-century pieces, decorative objects, and collectibles across roughly 8,000 square feet on the city's south side. It anchors Oklahoma City's antique shopping landscape as a consolidated venue where independent vendors operate individual booths, giving it more breadth than single-owner shops but more curation than a pure storage facility.
The space functions as a cooperative antique mall rather than a consignment store or single-proprietor showroom. Each dealer rents booth space and stocks their own inventory, meaning the mall's character shifts by booth. Furniture dominates the floor plan, particularly mid-century modern pieces, Victorian-era bedroom sets, and dining tables. Vintage glass, pottery, jewelry, and smaller collectibles fill shelves throughout. Pricing reflects dealer-to-dealer variation; expect to negotiate on larger items at some booths but not others, depending on the vendor's approach.
Furniture prices range from $50 for side chairs or small tables to $800 or more for intact bedroom suites or quality dining sets. Mid-century modern pieces (dressers, credenzas, occasional tables) typically fall between $150 and $400. Smaller items—vintage glassware, figurines, ceramic planters—start at $5 to $15. The mall does not operate a unified pricing system; each booth sets its own tags, and some dealers are firm while others expect haggling on multi-item purchases. Verify current hours by phone before visiting, as mall hours can shift seasonally.
Another Time differs from single-dealer shops like those in Bricktown's antique row, which typically focus on one owner's curatorial eye and may specialize narrowly (silver, art glass, or ephemera). The mall's advantage is selection density and furniture availability; the trade-off is less consistency in quality or theme. It also differs from estate sale companies, which operate transactionally and close after each sale. Compared to online marketplaces, Another Time rewards browsing and lets you inspect pieces for condition, wood quality, and construction before buying. Compared to larger regional antique malls in Dallas or Tulsa, Another Time is smaller but remains the largest multi-dealer venue in Oklahoma City proper.
Another Time suits decorators, home furnishers on a budget, mid-century modern enthusiasts, and collectors seeking vintage glass or ceramics without specialized dealers. Furniture shoppers benefit most; the mall's scale makes it worth a full visit for a dining set or bedroom refresh. It is less suited to people seeking authenticated or appraised antiques, museum-quality pieces, or items with documented provenance. It also does not serve urgent same-day needs; inventory turns slowly, so returning to find a specific piece is unreliable.
Plan for one to two hours. Enter through the front, orient yourself to the booth layout (typically arranged by zone rather than strict category), and survey furniture first if that is your focus; smaller collectibles are stocked throughout. Most booths are labeled with the dealer's name or number, and some accept cards while others are cash-only. The mall itself has a register for transactions from vendors who use the centralized checkout, though some booths operate independently. Temperature and lighting are adequate but not enhanced; this is a working antique space, not a museum environment.
Another Time occupies a dedicated building on the south side of Oklahoma City with parking immediately outside. The space is ground-level and accessible without stairs for initial browsing, though some inventory sits on upper shelves. Hours typically run Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., with Sunday hours varying by season. Verify hours by phone before driving, as holiday closures and vendor coordination occasionally shift the schedule. The neighborhood is retail-residential and safe during daytime hours; arrive before 4 p.m. to avoid a rushed final hour.
Another Time anchors Oklahoma City's mid-range antique market by offering volume and variety in a single space, making it the natural first stop for furniture hunting rather than a specialty destination.
