Old Highway 270 Mercantile is a 5,000-square-foot antique dealer specializing in mid-century furniture, vintage architectural elements, and salvaged building materials, located in Oklahoma City's Eastside Industrial corridor. The shop draws from estate sales and demolition projects across the region, making it a primary source for buyers seeking period-correct pieces and reclaimed doors, mantels, and hardware for restoration work rather than mall-style collectibles.
The shop stocks furniture from the 1940s through 1980s, with particular depth in mid-century modern pieces (credenzas, sectionals, teak dining tables) alongside country and rustic farmhouse inventory. A separate section holds architectural salvage: exterior doors, interior doorframes with original hardware, cast-iron mantels, vintage light fixtures, and occasionally larger items like antique bathtubs and sink vanities salvaged from local demolition projects. Inventory rotates weekly based on estate acquisitions; the shop does not maintain a static catalog, so specific pieces appear and sell within days during the high seasons (spring and early fall).
Furniture prices range from $300 for smaller side tables to $3,500 for restored sectionals or exceptional mid-century bedroom sets. Architectural salvage runs $50 for vintage drawer pulls to $1,200 for intact mantels or sets of period doors. The shop offers in-house furniture restoration (reupholstering, wood finishing, hardware replacement) at hourly labor rates starting at $65 per hour; customers may source pieces on site and commission work, or bring their own acquisitions for restoration. Delivery is available for local purchases over $500 for a flat fee of $75 to $150 depending on distance and item weight; assembly and installation of doors or architectural elements can be arranged separately. Call ahead to confirm current rates and restoration lead times, as labor availability fluctuates.
Paseo District antique galleries (such as those along NW 23rd Street) focus on decorative objects, vintage clothing, and smaller collectibles under $300; Old Highway 270 Mercantile is the better choice if you need functional furniture or room-scale architectural elements. Square One Antique Mall, located near downtown, offers mall-style booth rentals from multiple dealers with lower average prices ($100–$800 range) but smaller, curated selections and no restoration services. For new or reproduction mid-century pieces, Room & Board and Design Within Reach in Uptown serve that segment; Old Highway 270 Mercantile suits buyers seeking authentic vintage items at a fraction of new prices, paired with in-house expertise and restoration capacity that most antique retailers do not offer.
Designers and contractors furnishing residential or commercial projects represent the core customer base; interior designers often maintain standing relationships and consignment arrangements. Homeowners restoring period homes or furnishing with authentic vintage pieces find depth in both furniture and architectural salvage. Casual collectors and bargain hunters hunting for sub-$100 items will find limited selection; the shop's curation skews toward investment-grade pieces and structural materials rather than trinkets. First-time vintage furniture buyers who want rapid turnover and mall-adjacent variety should visit Paseo galleries instead.
Plan 45 minutes to 90 minutes depending on whether you browse furniture alone or consult staff about restoration. The shop is organized by category (furniture by era and style, salvage by type) but dense; staff can pull archived photographs of recent acquisitions if you have specific needs. Bring measurements if seeking pieces for particular spaces; staff assess fit and can discuss structural condition, wood species, and originality. If restoration interests you, they will provide rough estimates on-site for reupholstering or finishing; detailed quotes require photographs or the piece itself. Parking is available directly in front and on the side lot; the building is unmarked and sits several blocks east of the main Eastside industrial commercial strip, so use GPS rather than street signage.
Old Highway 270 Mercantile is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.; closed Monday and Wednesday. Parking is free and on-site. Confirm current hours by phone or the shop's social media before visiting, as holiday closures and restoration project schedules occasionally shift weekly availability. The location is approximately 4 miles southeast of Bricktown.
Old Highway 270 Mercantile fills a gap between mall antique culture and high-end design showrooms, offering access to functional inventory with the restoration capacity to make pieces work in contemporary homes.
