The Junkyard Diva is a salvage and antiques shop specializing in mid-century modern furniture, industrial fixtures, and architectural reclaimed materials, located in the Midtown neighborhood and scaled to serious collectors and casual decorators alike.
The Junkyard Diva stocks furniture from the 1940s through 1970s, metal industrial pieces (factory carts, warehouse shelving, machine parts repurposed as wall art), and salvaged architectural elements including doors, hardware, and lighting fixtures. Inventory rotates weekly; the shop does not maintain a website catalog, so browsing in person is necessary to see current stock. The space itself, housed in a converted commercial building, uses its own bones as display—exposed brick, concrete floors, and open ceiling—which reinforces the industrial aesthetic and makes the merchandise feel contextual rather than stacked.
Small decorative items (vintage industrial signs, smaller metal pieces, mid-century ashtrays and glassware) range from $15 to $60. Mid-size furniture like credenzas, side tables, and office chairs typically run $200 to $600. Larger statement pieces such as full mid-century sofas, filing cabinets, or substantial industrial shelving units cost $700 to $2,500 or higher depending on condition and rarity. Architectural salvage (doors, light fixtures, reclaimed wood) prices vary widely; verify current pricing on specific items during a visit, as these pieces move quickly and are priced individually rather than by category. The shop accepts cash and card.
The Junkyard Diva differs from general estate and consignment shops like the nearby Attic Antiques, which carries mixed vintage across all eras and price points ($10 to $500 range), because it curates specifically for the mid-century and industrial aesthetic and holds inventory at higher price tiers for authenticated or rare pieces. Unlike the Paseo's smaller art-focused galleries and vintage boutiques, which blend antiques with new jewelry and local crafts, the Junkyard Diva commits entirely to furniture and architectural elements. It suits collectors hunting specific mid-century designers or industrial pieces more readily than browsers seeking bargain bins. For lower price-point vintage, estate sales and consignment chains are faster; for high-end authenticated mid-century design, specialized dealers outside the city may offer deeper archives, but the Junkyard Diva balances local accessibility with serious curation.
This shop works well for homeowners renovating lofts, offices, or restaurants who want industrial or mid-century pieces with character; interior designers sourcing statement furniture; and collectors building specific collections around an era or designer. First-time vintage shoppers on tight budgets should start elsewhere; the entry price for unique usable furniture here is $150+. Shoppers expecting perfectly restored or museum-quality pieces should confirm condition before committing; many items show honest wear, which is often their appeal but not universally desired.
Arrive with time to walk the full space; layout is not grid-organized, and pieces are often stacked or grouped by style rather than category. A typical browse takes 30 to 45 minutes. Staff will answer questions about era, condition, or origin if they are present; some visits may find the shop lightly staffed. If you find something substantial (furniture larger than a side table), ask about delivery options and costs, which vary. Items can be held briefly if you ask, but the shop does not guarantee hold periods; popular pieces sell the same day. Bringing measurements for doorways or wall space is practical, as some industrial shelving or large credenzas are heavy and permanent-looking once installed.
The Junkyard Diva operates Tuesday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Sunday 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.; it is closed Monday. It sits on a Midtown block with street parking; the lot is shared with neighboring businesses, so availability depends on time of day. Verify current hours before visiting, as retail hours shift seasonally. The location is walkable from the Midtown Commons area if you are already in the neighborhood.
The Junkyard Diva fills a gap between big-box vintage resale and high-end design showrooms, making it the practical entry point for Oklahoma City shoppers who want real character without traveling to Kansas City or Dallas for mid-century stock.
