Downtown

Downtown

The beating heart of Tulsa — where Art Deco towers meet modern energy.

Downtown Tulsa is the city's gravitational center — a walkable grid of Art Deco towers, repurposed warehouses, and glass-fronted newcomers that tell the story of a city perpetually reinventing itself. The Deco architecture alone is worth a slow walk: the Philtower, the Boston Avenue Methodist Church, and the Mid-Continent Tower are genuine American treasures.

But Downtown isn't a museum. Guthrie Green anchors a live-work district where food trucks roll in at lunch and live music fills summer evenings. The BOK Center brings major touring acts, while the Tulsa Performing Arts Center hosts everything from ballet to Broadway. The new Tulsa Museum of Art and ahha Tulsa keep the creative energy humming in between headliners.

This is where the suits and the artists share sidewalks — where a craft cocktail bar sits a block from a century-old diner, and where the Tulsa skyline still surprises people who didn't know Oklahoma had one.

Neighborhood Rhythms

Mornings bring the coffee-and-commute crowd. Lunch hours flood Guthrie Green and the surrounding blocks with downtown workers grabbing tacos and grain bowls. Evenings shift gears: happy hours on the Blue Dome strip, pre-show dinners on Main, and late-night energy around the bars south of 2nd Street.

Getting Here & Getting Around

Bounded roughly by the Inner Dispersal Loop (IDL) — the highway ring that traces the edges of the original Tulsa plat. Interstate 244 runs along the north side, and the Arkansas River lies just west. Cherry Street is a short drive south; the Tulsa Arts District sits on the northern edge.

Places in Downtown

What's Happening

Community Organizations