Elizabeth Place is a 158-unit mid-rise apartment community in Oklahoma City's Midtown neighborhood, positioned as a moderately priced option for renters seeking walkable urban living without the cost premium of the city's newest downtown developments.
Completed in the early 2010s, Elizabeth Place occupies a corner location that puts residents within a few blocks of Midtown's retail and dining corridor, coffee shops, and the Automobile Alley cultural district. The building is four stories, contains no commercial ground-floor retail, and maintains a straightforward rental model focused on the 25-to-45 age range. This is a conventional apartment community, not a luxury high-rise, not an intentional community, and not age-restricted housing.
Elizabeth Place offers studio, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom units. Studio rents begin in the low $700s; one-bedrooms range from roughly $850 to $950; two-bedrooms from $1,050 to $1,200. Lease terms run 12 months standard, with some month-to-month availability at higher rates. All units include water and trash in rent; tenants pay their own electric. Parking is included and unassigned. Verify current pricing and floor plan details directly, as rates adjust seasonally and promotions appear periodically.
The community includes a fitness center, a small pool, and a leasing office open weekdays during business hours and limited weekend access. Pets are permitted with a nonrefundable fee per animal.
Elizabeth Place occupies a middle tier in Oklahoma City's rental market. The nearby Plaza District and Uptown areas offer older, smaller, and occasionally cheaper independent units and smaller complexes, many without amenities like pools or fitness facilities; those options appeal to renters prioritizing character or savings over uniformity. Conversely, newer downtown-adjacent properties such as those along Film Row and the Broadway corridor command $200 to $400 more per month for units built after 2015, with higher finishes and rooftop access.
Elizabeth Place suits renters who want Midtown's walkability and established neighborhood feel at a price point closer to suburban apartment averages, without committing to the premium charged by brand-new construction. If your priority is the newest building or luxury finishes, downtown and Film Row properties deliver. If your priority is lowest rent and you don't require amenities, older independent units in surrounding neighborhoods cost less.
Elizabeth Place works well for young professionals, graduate students, and established couples seeking a known quantity: a stable, maintained building with predictable management, parking, a gym, and proximity to Midtown's social and dining scene. It suits renters who drive and benefit from the included parking but also walk to nearby coffee shops and restaurants.
It does not suit renters seeking luxury finishes, high-end appliances, or the newest construction. It does not suit those unwilling to pay for parking or uncomfortable in a larger community structure. It does not suit anyone looking for a quiet residential neighborhood setting; the building is urban and near higher-traffic corridors.
Walk-in leasing is available during office hours. Bring a government ID and be prepared to discuss income, employment, and rental history. Elizabeth Place typically requires proof of income at two to three times the monthly rent, a credit check, and a background check. Application fees apply and are nonrefundable. Approval usually occurs within one to three business days. Move-in requires a security deposit equal to one month's rent plus any pet fees.
The leasing office is open Monday through Friday during standard business hours; Saturday and Sunday hours are limited. Parking is included and unassigned in a surface lot and garage structure. The building is located on a corner lot with direct street access, roughly 1.5 miles north of downtown and immediately south of the NW 23rd Street shopping corridor. Public transit (EMBARK) passes nearby but is not frequent; a personal vehicle is practical.
Elizabeth Place delivers conventional apartment living in Midtown at a price that reflects the neighborhood's established appeal without the markup of luxury new construction, making it a reliable choice for renters prioritizing location over cutting-edge amenities.
