Antique Lofts occupies a converted warehouse in the Stockyard City area and stocks mid-century modern furniture, vintage industrial pieces, and restored décor across roughly 10,000 square feet of open floor space. The business is a retail dealer rather than an auction house or consignment shop, meaning prices are fixed and inventory shifts as pieces sell and new stock arrives. It attracts both interior designers furnishing commercial projects and individual buyers hunting for a single accent chair or dining table.
The inventory leans heavily toward 1950s and 1960s American furniture: sectional sofas in period upholstery, credenzas, side tables with tapered legs, and office-era desks. Industrial-era items fill secondary wall sections: factory carts, metal shelving, Edison-style lighting, and salvaged architectural elements. Smaller décor items—clocks, mirrors, glassware, vintage signage—occupy lower shelves and tables near the entrance. Stock rotates monthly; the business does not maintain a published inventory list, so specificity depends on timing of a visit.
A typical mid-century side table costs $150 to $400. Credenzas and sideboards range from $600 to $1,500, depending on wood type and restoration work. Sectional sofas start at $1,200 and can exceed $2,500 for larger configurations. Smaller decorative items cost $20 to $150. Pieces are either original finish or professionally refinished; Antique Lofts does not sell items in rough condition. Upholstered pieces have been reupholstered or restored rather than sold as-is.
Antique Lofts differs from The Paseo Antique Mall, a multi-vendor cooperative with 100-plus booths carrying a broad range of eras and styles (Victorian, Depression glass, toys, ephemera). The Paseo is better for hunting unmarked treasures at lower entry prices ($5 to $50 for many items) but requires patience sorting through volume. Antique Lofts suits buyers who know they want mid-century design and value curated selection over bargain hunting. Bricktown Antique Market, a another multi-vendor space, carries similar breadth to The Paseo but with slightly higher price tiers. For furniture specifically, Antique Lofts has deeper stock than either cooperative and handles restoration in-house, whereas The Paseo and Bricktown rely on vendor quality control.
The space works well for interior designers needing 5 to 10 pieces for a residential or commercial project and for design-conscious homeowners furnishing a kitchen, bedroom, or office. The warehouse layout allows browsing without sales pressure. It suits buyers comfortable with period aesthetics and willing to pay for quality restoration. It does not suit bargain hunters, buyers seeking rare antiques or collectibles (coins, stamps, fine art), or those looking for one-of-a-kind vintage finds. It also does not suit buyers needing immediate delivery; pieces can be held but shipping and delivery arrangements are separate transactions.
Arrive prepared to walk the entire space; there is no front-desk summary or catalog. Pieces are arranged by type (sofas in one section, desks and credenzas in another, lighting overhead) but without strict signage. Bring a phone camera to document dimensions, wood finishes, or upholstery patterns if you are deciding between multiple items or consulting a decorator. Staff can answer questions about condition, restoration methods, and the era of a piece but do not provide detailed provenance. Budget 45 minutes to an hour for a first visit if browsing the full space.
Antique Lofts operates Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.; it is closed Mondays. The warehouse is located in Stockyard City and has its own on-site parking lot. No public transit serves this area directly; a car is necessary. Verify current hours before visiting, as seasonal adjustments occur occasionally.
Antique Lofts fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City's antique market: curated mid-century and industrial stock at professional-dealer prices, in a space large enough to browse without appointment. It suits designers and collectors who prioritize selection and restoration quality over bargain pricing or the thrill of the hunt.
