800 North Meridian Place is a mid-rise apartment community in Oklahoma City's Midtown district, positioned between the Plaza District and downtown, with direct access to the Meridian corridor and the 405 freeway. The building houses 220 units across studio, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom floor plans, marketed primarily to young professionals and small households seeking walkable proximity to restaurants, galleries, and employment centers without the commute to suburban complexes.
The complex opened in the mid-2010s as part of Oklahoma City's infill residential wave, when Midtown zoning began permitting denser development. It sits in a built-out neighborhood rather than on the outskirts, meaning residents walk to Pizzeria Bianco, Goro Ramen, and Pasture without crossing a parking lot. The building itself is a five-story concrete structure with a ground-floor amenity suite, surface and structured parking, and no on-site retail. Unit count and density position it as a mid-market option, larger than a boutique conversion project but smaller than the 300-plus-unit towers rising near Bricktown.
Studio units run approximately 450 to 520 square feet and rent in the $900 to $1,100 range. One-bedroom units occupy 650 to 750 square feet and start around $1,100, with higher-floor or end-unit premiums pushing top rents to $1,350. Two-bedroom units span 900 to 1,050 square feet and range from $1,400 to $1,700, depending on floor height and exposure. Rent figures should be confirmed directly, as market rates shift seasonally and promotional periods can affect move-in costs. Leases run 12 months; typical security deposits equal one month's rent. Parking is included in rent, with one space per unit in designated surface or structure areas.
The Meridian location competes most directly with nearby complexes like Midtown Square and Brickell on Broadway, both within the same walkable radius but with different trade-offs. Midtown Square sits one block west and offers similar walk-to-dining but smaller unit footprints and slightly lower rent; its trade-off is less building amenity space. Brickell on Broadway, near Film Row south of the plaza, caters to the same demographic but charges a premium for proximity to Bricktown's bar scene and the Chesapeake Arena. 800 North Meridian's advantage is its central position between dining districts and its straightforward freeway access for commuters to Bricktown offices or the energy corridor—a practical choice for someone who splits time between walkable weekends and highway commuting. Choose Brickell if your social life centers on Bricktown nightlife; choose Midtown Square if you prioritize rent savings over unit square footage; choose 800 North Meridian if you want walkable access without Bricktown's premium and without downsizing your apartment.
Broader comparison: suburban garden apartments in Edmond or northwest OKC rent $200 to $400 less but require a car for dining and entertainment. Urban alternatives in Bricktown proper or near the Skirvin museum district offer different neighborhood character and fewer restaurants within blocks. 800 North Meridian is the middle path, trading some financial savings for neighborhood maturity and location convenience.
This complex works well for young professionals with jobs near Midtown, downtown, or the energy corridor who value walkable evenings without a car. Artists and creative workers drawn to the Plaza's gallery and coffee scenes are also a core fit. Empty nesters downsizing from houses in Nichols Hills or Edmond find the building's density and walkability attractive.
It does not suit families prioritizing schools; Midtown zoning does not feed high-performing elementary schools in the district. It also underperforms for people who need substantial amenity packages—there is no pool, fitness center, or courtyard; amenities focus on the lobby and parking infrastructure.
Leasing happens Monday through Friday during standard business hours in the ground-floor office. Walk-ins are accepted, though scheduling a showing ensures a staff member is available. Most showings take 15 to 20 minutes and include a model unit tour, floor plan review, and parking lot walk-through. Bring a valid ID and proof of income (recent pay stub or tax return); initial applications process the same day. Approval typically takes two to three business days if your income is steady and credit report is clean. Move-in usually occurs within 10 to 14 days.
The leasing office is open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Sunday hours are not standard. Confirm current hours before visiting. Parking is one space per unit, assigned in the surface lot or structured garage on the south side of the building; guest parking is available in the main lot. The property sits at the northwest corner of NW 10th Street and North Meridian Avenue, with direct access to I-405 northbound and southbound within two minutes. The Plaza District is a 0.3-mile walk; Film Row galleries are 0.6 miles south.
800 North Meridian Place fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City's housing stock: a centrally located, moderately priced complex that serves people who work and play in Midtown without needing a car for their neighborhood. It is neither luxury nor discount; it is a practical choice for the urban-leaning renter who wants walkability and freeway access in the same lease.
