Tulsa Walmart Near Woodland Hills Mall Undergoing Major Renovation
A $37.7 million renovation permit filed for the Walmart Supercenter just north of Woodland Hills Mall confirms one of Tulsa's largest active store remodels of 2026.

The $37.7 million renovation permit filed with the city of Tulsa for the Walmart Supercenter at 10938 S. Memorial Drive, just north of Woodland Hills Mall, makes Store #1597 one of the largest active commercial construction projects in the city's current permit queue. Tulsa's weekly commercial construction update, which lists new commercial construction, expansions, and enlargements exceeding $100,000, published the filing on March 29, 2026. The permit summary does not include a project completion date, a phased construction schedule, or confirmation of which sales-floor sections will see temporary disruption.
For associates at this location, the $37.7 million figure is less urgent than what it means for the next work schedule. Projects of this scale typically unfold in phases that push product locations across the sales floor multiple times, require overnight or early-morning contractor windows to avoid peak shopping hours, and pull hourly associates into staging and restocking roles as work moves department to department. Noise, temporary aisle closures, and shifted signage become regular conditions, and freight stocking routines can be disrupted when contractor equipment occupies receiving or backroom space.
Walmart's current renovation strategy provides useful context for what to expect here. Beginning in April 2026, the company is testing a rapid remodel process at select Neighborhood Market stores in Florida, Oklahoma, Texas, Georgia, South Carolina, and Louisiana, condensing construction by temporarily closing main sales floors for approximately four weeks rather than stretching phased work over several months. During these rapid remodels, pharmacies and fuel stations remain open while store associates work alongside remodel teams, setting up new fixtures, organizing products, and preparing the store to welcome customers back. That specific pilot targets the Neighborhood Market format rather than Supercenters, but it reflects the same operational logic Walmart is applying across its broader 2026 remodel activity.
Renovations in this 2026 cycle also include the addition of digital shelf labels and enhanced pickup and delivery areas to support growing demand for online orders. Associates asked to take on remodel-adjacent tasks, such as setting up new fixtures, moving product to updated planogram positions, or supporting temporary staging areas, should verify with their People Lead whether those assignments carry any temporary pay differential or affect scheduled hours and PPTO accrual. Remodel projects can create short-term role shifts that are not always communicated formally in advance, and confirming the details before the work ramps up is easier than resolving them after a paycheck posts.
Customer traffic patterns at Store #1597 will shift as well. When departments are partially inaccessible or sections are relocated without immediate signage updates, shoppers default to pickup and delivery orders. Fulfillment and OGP associates should anticipate higher order volume during active construction phases, and managers overseeing staging areas near the pickup bays will need to coordinate those spaces around contractor access schedules.
Official project details, phased timelines, and any temporary entrance or parking changes will come through store management and internal communications. Me@Walmart and posted store signage are the most reliable channels to track confirmed updates as construction moves forward.
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