Lamp Post Lounge is a modest dance club on the edges of Bricktown that draws a mix of regulars and weekend crowds with rotating DJs, two-for-one well drinks during happy hour, and cover charges that range from free on slow weeknights to $10 on Saturdays. The space operates as a neighborhood alternative to larger venues downtown, prioritizing accessibility and sustained affordability over production scale.
The lounge sits in a converted storefront with a single main floor, a compact bar along one wall, and a dance floor barely large enough for 40 or 50 people dancing at capacity. The lighting rig is basic—LED strips and occasional strobes—and the sound system is functional but not concert-grade. Lamp Post has built its reputation on consistency rather than flash: the same crew of DJs rotates through most weeks, the bar staff knows regulars by name, and the cover is low enough that a weeknight outing does not feel like a financial commitment.
Lamp Post features resident and visiting DJs who typically spin house, hip-hop, and top-40, with occasional Latin and electronic nights. Most weekday evenings (Monday through Thursday) have no cover charge; Friday and Saturday covers run $10 and $15 respectively, depending on whether a touring or high-draw resident is behind the decks. Happy hour pricing applies from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., with well drinks at two for one and call liquor moderately discounted. Table reservations are not standard; seating is first-come, first-served at high tops and bar stools, and the club does not impose table minimums.
Bricktown Ballroom, located three blocks east in the heart of Bricktown, offers a much larger dance floor, professional sound and lighting, and national touring DJs on major event nights; its cover charges range from $10 to $30, and it caters to bachelorette parties and large groups. Vibe, on the north side of downtown, operates as a nightclub with more polished production and themed nights; covers there typically start at $15 and rise for special events. Lamp Post occupies a different niche: it is the choice when you want to dance without committing a large cover or spending $15 on a single cocktail, when you value the regulars' atmosphere over impressive production, and when you are not coordinating a group that needs table service or reserved space.
The lounge appeals to locals who live or work nearby, small groups of friends (four to eight people) looking for a casual night out, and anyone who prefers low-pressure social drinking with music. It works best on weeknights when the crowd is lighter and conversation possible, and on Fridays when the energy builds without overwhelming the intimate floor plan. Lamp Post is not suitable for groups larger than 12 or 15, for anyone seeking upscale cocktails or bottle service, or for visitors unfamiliar with Bricktown who expect a major-venue experience; those customers should head to Bricktown Ballroom or Vibe.
Walk in through a standard street entrance; the bar runs the length of the left wall, and the dance floor occupies the back half of the space. Arrive before 9 p.m. on a weekday and you will find a handful of regulars and a DJ setting the tone for the evening; arrive after 10 p.m. on a Friday and the floor will be full. Order at the bar (cash and card accepted), and move toward the dance floor or claim a high top if one is open. The DJ usually takes requests via a note or text system posted at the bar; Lamp Post is small enough that your song request has a real chance of getting played.
Lamp Post operates Tuesday through Saturday, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.; hours may shift seasonally or for special events, so confirm via phone or social media before planning a specific night. Parking is street-only in Bricktown; the lot adjacent to the building is paid by meter during the day and free after 6 p.m. The venue is wheelchair-accessible via the front entrance, though the narrow dance floor and high tops make maneuvering difficult during busy nights.
Lamp Post fills a genuine gap in Oklahoma City's dance-club spectrum: it offers live DJ programming and a real dance floor without the overhead, pricing, or posturing of larger rooms. For locals and repeat visitors, that consistency is the point.
