Olde Towne Emporium is a 10,000-square-foot multi-dealer antiques mall in the Bricktown district that houses roughly 80 vendor booths across two floors, with particular depth in mid-century modern furniture, vintage primitives, and restored architectural salvage. It functions as a cooperative space where individual dealers rent booth space rather than a single-owner inventory, meaning stock rotates constantly and the mall carries everything from affordable small collectibles to investment-grade pieces.
The space occupies a restored brick building typical of Bricktown's early-1900s warehouse district. The ground floor runs the length of the block and breaks into loosely organized zones: a front section focused on furniture and larger pieces, a middle stretch with textiles and decorative objects, and a back area where architectural elements (mantels, hardware, doors, ironwork) tend to cluster. The second floor is narrower but similarly divided, with dealers favoring smaller inventory, frames, glassware, and ephemera. Aisles are wide enough to navigate with furniture carts, and lighting is adequate but not dramatic. The building's original brick and timber create the expected antiques-mall atmosphere without feeling overdone.
Booth rents across the mall run $150 to $400 monthly depending on floor and size, and dealers price independently, which means a single maker's work or category can vary significantly. A mid-century credenza typically runs $800 to $2,200; vintage primitives (cast iron, wood boxes, farm tools) usually sit between $25 and $350. Small collectibles, glassware, and reproductions fill the $5 to $50 range. Because vendor booths turn over and dealers refresh stock regularly, inventory is genuinely different on visits weeks apart. This also means if you spot something specific, there is no guarantee it will still be there next week.
The Antique Malls of Oklahoma City collectively offer several comparable spaces. The Antique Marketplace, also in Bricktown, is slightly larger at 15,000 square feet with around 100 booths and skews toward higher-end furniture and décor; expect to pay $200 to $400 more for comparable pieces. Paseo Fine Antiques, located on NW 23rd in the Paseo Arts District, operates as a curated single-owner shop with tighter inventory and higher average price points, but offers expert appraisal and restoration services on-site. Olde Towne Emporium positions itself between those two: bigger than a single-dealer boutique, smaller and friendlier than the largest malls, with a dealer mix that leans working-class and practical rather than rarified. Choose Olde Towne if you want variety, affordability, and the energy of discovering pieces from 80 different vendors. Choose the Antique Marketplace if you want specialist dealers and one-stop browsing in a larger footprint. Choose Paseo Fine Antiques if you want curation, restoration support, or investment-grade acquisition.
Olde Towne suits interior designers sourcing bulk stock, young homeowners furnishing apartments with character, and collectors hunting specific mid-century styles. The booth variety means you can spend 45 minutes or three hours and always find something. It's cash-friendly but credit cards are accepted; most booths price items under $100, so impulse buys are easy. It does not suit visitors looking for a single expert opinion, museum-quality pieces, or items guaranteed to be in stock on return. It also moves slowly on Mondays and Tuesdays, so foot traffic shapes dealer attention and booth turnover.
Arrive early in the afternoon on a Thursday, Friday, or Saturday for the best light and dealer presence. Most visitors start on the ground floor by browsing the front furniture section, then work toward the back where architectural pieces often catch the eye. The second floor is less crowded and rewards careful looking; booths there specialize in smaller finds that are easy to miss. Budget 60 to 90 minutes for a genuine browse without rushing. Bring a phone to photograph items you want to think about; dealers often work multiple booths or are not immediately visible, so messaging rather than waiting usually accelerates communication.
Olde Towne Emporium operates Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday noon to 5 p.m.; it is closed Mondays. (Verify current hours, as antiques mall operations can shift seasonally.) The building sits at the eastern edge of Bricktown with its own small lot; street parking is also available on the Bricktown brick streets. The space is ground-floor and second-floor accessible without stairs for browsing, though moving large furniture typically requires dealer coordination.
Olde Towne Emporium functions as Oklahoma City's working-class antiques mall, prioritizing volume, variety, and neighborhood integration over rarity or top-tier curation. For local shoppers hunting mid-century pieces or design material at realistic prices, it remains the most reliable choice.
