Steelyard is a mid-rise apartment complex in Oklahoma City's Midtown district housed in a repurposed steel fabrication warehouse, offering 150 units across studio, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom floor plans with exposed brick, concrete floors, and industrial-style finishes as standard.
Built from a 1970s manufacturing facility near NW 23rd Street, Steelyard preserves the building's skeletal structure and materials while subdividing the interior into residential units. The property sits within walking distance of restaurants and bars along NW 23rd and the adjacent Automobile Alley district. Most units retain ceiling heights between 12 and 16 feet and feature original or replica industrial detailing. The complex includes 180 parking spaces in a surface lot and a secured underground garage component.
Steelyard offers three primary floor plans. Studio units run approximately 450 to 500 square feet and lease for roughly $850 to $950 per month (verify current rates). One-bedroom units, typically 650 to 750 square feet, range from $1,100 to $1,300 monthly. Two-bedroom units occupy 950 to 1,100 square feet and lease between $1,450 and $1,650. Pricing depends on floor level, exposure, and lease term; units on higher floors or with corner windows command premiums. All leases require a standard security deposit equal to one month's rent, and Steelyard charges a $35 monthly parking fee for surface lot spaces (garage spaces cost additional). Utility costs are tenant-paid, typical for converted lofts in Oklahoma City; heating and cooling a 12-foot-high unit runs higher than comparable-square-footage garden apartments.
The Paseo Arts District, three blocks south, contains smaller independent apartments and renovated houses at similar or slightly higher price points but with less standardized amenities. Plaza District, six blocks west, offers a mix of historic courtyard apartments and newer construction; newer units there run 10 to 15 percent higher but often include on-site fitness facilities and package delivery systems. Deep Deuce, immediately east, has added several loft-conversion projects in the past five years with comparable aesthetics; however, Steelyard's scale (150 units versus 30 to 60 at competing conversions) means more consistent maintenance and faster service response.
Choose Steelyard if you want the industrial aesthetic without committing to a small, owner-managed property. Choose independent historic buildings in the Paseo if you prefer character variations and smaller community feel. Choose Plaza District newer construction if fitness facilities and modern climate control are priorities.
Steelyard appeals to renters aged 25 to 45 who value exposed materials and ceiling height over traditional apartment finishes. Young professionals working downtown or in Midtown offices benefit from the location. Renters with pets under 40 pounds are accepted (verification recommended on current breed and size restrictions). The property does not suit residents sensitive to noise (an industrial conversion in an active neighborhood can transmit sound from adjacent businesses and the street), families with multiple children (two-bedroom units offer limited separation), or renters expecting in-unit laundry (a communal laundry facility serves the complex, typical for conversions where plumbing retrofits are prohibitive).
Contact Steelyard's leasing office via phone or the website to schedule a showing; response times typically run one to two business days. During a tour, you will walk the building's common areas, view a model unit matching your target floor plan, and inspect the parking situation. Leasing staff will review the application process: proof of income (typically 3x monthly rent), background check (costs vary but run $30 to $50), and employment verification. Move-in typically occurs 7 to 14 days after approval; tenants coordinate directly with the management office for key pickup and utility transfer.
The leasing office is open Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (verify weekend hours before visiting). Surface lot parking is unreserved; garage spaces are assigned and require advance lease. No on-site EV charging currently exists. The property is accessible via NW 23rd Street; direct car access from Broadway and Classen Boulevard is two blocks north.
Steelyard fills the need for large-scale industrial-conversion housing in Midtown and justifies its pricing through consistent availability and downtown adjacency that independent loft buildings cannot match.
