East Town Antique Mall is a 20,000-square-foot cooperative space housing roughly 80 independent vendor stalls on the ground floor of the Warehouse Row building in the East End, between Main Street and the pedestrian bridge to the North Shore. Rather than a single curated inventory, it functions as a marketplace where individual dealers rotate stock, meaning selection shifts weekly and no two visits stock the same items.
The space occupies a raw industrial ground floor, exposed brick and polished concrete, divided into numbered booth sections. Each vendor operates independently, setting their own pricing and deciding what to display. The result is an unfiltered cross-section: furniture ranging from mid-century modern to reproduction Victorian sits next to glassware, records, tools, lighting, textiles, and local art. The mall does not curate by era or aesthetic, so a booth selling 1970s kitchen gadgets may sit directly across from another stocked entirely with architectural salvage. This model attracts both serious collectors hunting specific pieces and casual browsers willing to spend an afternoon picking through layers of inventory.
Individual vendor pricing varies by booth. Most furniture pieces fall between $75 and $400; smaller items (glassware, books, vinyl records) typically range from $5 to $40. High-end vintage or rare pieces do appear but are not the primary focus. The mall itself charges no admission, and there is no time limit on browsing. Haggling is not standard practice here since vendors set individual prices, though some dealers will negotiate on larger purchases. Cash and card are both accepted at individual booths.
Chattanooga has several distinct antique shopping models. Frazier's Antique Mall, also multi-dealer, operates in a similar cooperative format but is located on Broad Street and tends to skew toward reproduction furniture and home décor. East Town's ground-floor warehouse location and higher turnover of vintage industrial and mid-century pieces makes it the better choice if you are hunting specific-era furniture or functional vintage goods. For single-dealer, carefully curated inventory, independent shops along Main Street or in the North Shore neighborhood offer a more polished, slower-browsing experience but with less selection density. East Town is the right choice if you want volume, variety, and the possibility of finding underpriced gems; it is not suited to someone seeking a quiet, focused shopping environment or authenticated antique valuations.
East Town works well for designers sourcing period-appropriate pieces in bulk, collectors patient enough to visit weekly as stock rotates, and anyone who enjoys the hunt in a low-pressure setting. It appeals to people furnishing a new space and wanting to mix eras and styles affordably. It does not work for customers seeking rare or authenticated items, those wanting expert appraisals, or people who need immediate gratification from a specific product. The space is also not wheelchair-accessible via standard entrance (vendor booths are ground level, but entry has a step).
Park in the Warehouse Row garage (free with validation from any tenant business or marked visitor parking on the street). Enter through the main Warehouse Row doors and ask a staff member to direct you to East Town; it is separate from the upper-floor shops. Allow 45 minutes to 90 minutes for a first sweep, though repeat visitors often drop in for 20 minutes to check for new stock. Booths are narrow and densely packed, so expect to move slowly and dodge other browsers on weekends. Most vendors do not staff their booths; payment happens at a central counter. There is no café inside, though Warehouse Row restaurants are steps away.
East Town Antique Mall is open Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Sunday, 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. (confirm hours by phone or website, as vendor participation can affect opening times). Street parking is available on Main Street and around Warehouse Row; a parking garage is attached to the building. The space is on the ground floor with one step at the main entrance. Cell service is strong. No restrooms are available inside East Town itself, but Warehouse Row tenants have public facilities.
This is the most active multi-dealer mall in Chattanooga's East End, moving enough inventory weekly to justify regular return visits and offering enough volume that even a first-time browser will find something worth the trip.
