The Jones Assembly
The Jones Assembly occupies a converted warehouse space on West Sheridan Avenue in Oklahoma City's Midtown corridor, drawing a crowd that ranges from post-work regulars to milestone-occasion groups. The bar and kitchen program leans into American comfort with serious cocktail credentials, placing it within a tier of OKC venues where atmosphere and drinks carry equal weight to the food.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.
- Address
- 901 W Sheridan Ave, Oklahoma City, OK 73106, USA
- Phone
- +1 405 212 2378
- Website
- thejonesassembly.com

A Warehouse Address That Sets the Tone for the Evening
West Sheridan Avenue in Oklahoma City's Midtown district has shifted considerably over the past decade, moving from light industrial use toward a cluster of food and drink destinations that draw residents from across the metro. The Jones Assembly sits inside a converted industrial building at 901 W Sheridan, and the structure itself does much of the work before a single drink arrives. High ceilings, exposed structural elements, and a floor plan that accommodates both large groups and pairs without either feeling lost or crowded, this is the kind of space that makes occasion dining feel appropriate rather than forced. You don't need a reason to be here, but the room makes it easy to invent one. The Jones Assembly is a bar in Oklahoma City at 901 W Sheridan Ave, with a 4.5 Google rating and a price tier of 3.
This format, the repurposed warehouse as gathering destination, has become a recognizable template in mid-sized American cities, where former light industrial zones have absorbed the energy that once concentrated downtown. Oklahoma City has followed that pattern more deliberately than many comparable metros, and Midtown has emerged as one of the more coherent dining and nightlife corridors in the region. Within that context, The Jones Assembly functions as something of an anchor: a venue large enough to absorb a birthday party or a pre-concert crowd without losing the ambient warmth that makes it worth returning to on an ordinary Wednesday.
Where the Cocktail Program Fits in Oklahoma City's Drinking Scene
Oklahoma City's bar scene has matured in ways that don't always register nationally, but the evidence is visible at street level. Venues like Bar Arbolada and Delmar Gardens have pushed the city's cocktail expectations upward, and The Jones Assembly operates in an environment where drinkers are increasingly calibrated. The bar program here draws consistent local attention, with guests frequently singling out the whiskey-forward cocktails and the house riffs on classic formats, built drinks that suit the industrial surroundings without performing novelty for its own sake.
For comparison, cities like Chicago and New York have developed cocktail programs that treat the drink itself as the destination, venues like Kumiko in Chicago and Superbueno in New York City have earned sustained recognition precisely because the bar is the point. The Jones Assembly operates differently: the cocktail program reinforces the occasion rather than commanding it, which suits a venue where the reasons to be there are as varied as the room's occupants on any given night. That positioning puts it closer to a Julep in Houston or an ABV in San Francisco, places where the drinks are seriously considered but the broader experience is the draw.
For those visiting from out of state or using The Jones Assembly as an introduction to Oklahoma City's bar culture, it offers a useful read on the direction the city is heading. The gap between OKC and the coasts on cocktail ambition has narrowed, and venues at this address are part of why. Further afield, bars like Jewel of the South in New Orleans, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, and The Parlour in Frankfurt represent the international tier of this category, useful benchmarks for understanding where the American mid-city bar scene sits relative to the broader conversation.
The Case for Occasion Dining Here
Oklahoma City has a range of options when a meal needs to carry weight, Cattlemen's Steakhouse handles the formal steakhouse occasion with decades of institutional authority, while Bedlam BAR-B-Q takes a more casual register. The Jones Assembly fills a middle tier that the city genuinely needed: celebratory without being stiff, substantial without requiring a dress code conversation.
The industrial-chic setting reads well for a certain kind of milestone meal, the kind where the group wants to feel they've chosen somewhere with personality rather than just somewhere appropriate. Milestone birthdays, job changes, pre-show dinners before an event at nearby Paycom Center, or the kind of catch-up dinner that requires both food and drink to do serious work over two or three hours: this venue handles all of those scenarios without needing to be reconfigured. The room's noise level and energy support celebration in a way that quieter, more formal environments don't, and that's a deliberate accommodation rather than an oversight.
It's worth noting where The Jones Assembly fits relative to the harder-edged food-focused operations in the city. Grey Sweater, at the far end of OKC's tasting menu spectrum, occupies a completely different register, smaller, more controlled, and demanding of the diner's full attention. Paseo Grill represents the established dining corridor of the Paseo Arts District. The Jones Assembly's West Sheridan address and format situate it as something more social and less ceremonial, which for most occasion diners is exactly the right calibration.
Planning a Visit: Practical Notes
The Jones Assembly is located at 901 W Sheridan Ave in Midtown Oklahoma City, driveable from most parts of the metro within fifteen minutes, and accessible from the downtown hotel corridor without requiring a highway. Midtown's density means parking requires a brief walk from street or lot options in the surrounding blocks, which is standard for this part of the city.
For group bookings and large occasion parties, arriving with a reservation or contacting the venue ahead of time is the sensible approach; the floor plan accommodates groups, but prime-time weekend availability is finite. Solo visitors and pairs tend to fare well at the bar itself, where the counter provides the full drinks experience without requiring a table reservation.
Booking and Cost Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Jones AssemblyThis venue — the venue you are viewing | $$$ | , | ||
| Patrono | Arts District, lounge | $$$ | , | |
| Piatto Italian Kitchen | $$$ | , | Nichols Hills, wine_bar | |
| Delmar Gardens | OKC Farmers Market District, Bar | $$ | , | |
| Stella Modern Italian Cuisine | $$$ | , | Midtown, wine_bar | |
| Osteria | $$ | , | Plaza District, cocktail_bar |
Continue exploring
More in Oklahoma City
Bars in Oklahoma City
Browse all →Restaurants in Oklahoma City
Browse all →At a Glance
- Lively
- Trendy
- Energetic
- Group Outing
- Celebration
- Live Music
- Courtyard
- Outdoor Terrace
- Lounge Seating
- Standing Room
- Craft Cocktails
- Classic Cocktails
Warm and inviting with Instagram-worthy patios, full-service bars, and an energetic atmosphere from live concerts and events.













