Lowe's Antiques is a single-dealer showroom specializing in mid-century and period furniture, with a steady rotation of vintage home décor, lamps, and collectibles across roughly 2,000 square feet on North Shore. The inventory leans toward usable pieces rather than rare collectibles, making it a destination for buyers hunting functional vintage furniture at fixed prices rather than auction-house bargains or high-end designer resale.
The showroom carries primarily mid-century modern and earlier American furniture: dressers, dining tables, credenzas, sofas, and occasional chairs from the 1950s through 1970s, with scattered earlier pieces. Lamps, mirrors, and small accessories round out the selection. Most items are priced individually on tags; pieces are typically cleaned but sold as-is without restoration or repair guarantees. The space allows you to walk through and evaluate condition directly, which matters for furniture shopping where sight and scale matter more than photos.
Furniture prices range from roughly $150 to $800 depending on era, style, and condition. A mid-century dining chair might run $120 to $250; a sideboard or credenza between $300 and $600. Smaller items like side tables, lamps, or decorative objects start around $40 to $150. Prices are firm rather than negotiated. Verify current inventory and hours before visiting, as showroom stock and operating schedules can shift.
Lowe's differs meaningfully from nearby competition. Dealers like those at Flea Market Chattanooga offer higher volume and lower prices on smaller, decorative items but less curated furniture selection. Architectural Artifacts focuses on salvage and building materials rather than furniture. Antique malls and multi-dealer spaces in the area (such as those downtown or on Gunbarrel Road) mix furniture with collectibles across many vendors, so you navigate inconsistent quality and pricing. Lowe's single-owner model means consistent aesthetic, vetted condition, and a working relationship with one voice if you have questions about a piece's era or original cost.
Lowe's suits buyers with a specific room in mind and a budget of $150 to $800 for a single piece. It works well for someone furnishing a first apartment with character, adding a mid-century accent to a modern home, or replacing a broken bedroom piece with vintage quality. It does not suit buyers hunting rare collectibles, investment-grade pieces, or anything requiring expert authentication. It is not a discount outlet; pricing reflects quality and cleaned-up condition but is fair rather than undercut. Bulk buyers or those needing multiple pieces quickly should expect a longer browse.
The showroom is small enough to survey in 20 to 30 minutes without rushing. Furniture is arranged to show pieces in context (a chair beside a side table, for instance), so you can visualize combinations. Pieces are tagged with price and era when known. Staff can answer basic questions about condition or style period but do not perform restoration or hold items on layaway. Payment is typically cash or card at point of sale. If you find a piece you want but need time to decide, ask whether the item will be held briefly; policy varies. Measure doorways or alcoves at home beforehand if you are shopping for a large piece.
Lowe's Antiques operates on North Shore, a neighborhood walkable but car-dependent from most of Chattanooga. Confirm current hours before visiting, as single-owner shops sometimes adjust seasonally. Street parking is usually available. The showroom is not wheelchair-accessible due to showroom layout and furniture placement, and moving large pieces out is a logistics conversation best had in person. No delivery service is offered, so plan for transport if you buy anything larger than a lamp or small side table.
Lowe's holds a practical place in Chattanooga's antique landscape, offering a curated, walkable alternative to mall browsing or online hunting when you want to touch and sit on a piece before committing.
