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  5. Zapp Hall at Round Top: The Complete Guide to Warrenton's Most Famous Tent Venue
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Zapp Hall at Round Top: The Complete Guide to Warrenton's Most Famous Tent Venue

Round Top Finder EditorialFriday, June 12, 2026
Zapp Hall at Round Top: The Complete Guide to Warrenton's Most Famous Tent Venue

Zapp Hall at Round Top: The Complete Guide to Warrenton's Most Famous Tent Venue

If you've spent any time at the Round Top Antiques Fair, you've heard the name Zapp Hall. It's the one venue in Warrenton that people drop in casual conversation like a shared password: "Meet me at Zapp Hall." "I found it at Zapp Hall." "We're parked behind Zapp Hall." More than a hundred years old, set right on Highway 237, and stitched into Texas Antiques Week since 1987, Zapp Hall is one of the most iconic stops on the entire Warrenton-to-Round Top corridor.

This is your full guide: what Zapp Hall is, what you'll find there, what it costs to shop and to get in, how to navigate the venue during show week, and exactly when to go to score the best deals. If you're new to Round Top, start here. If you're a regular, you'll still pick up a tip or two.

What Is Zapp Hall

Zapp Hall is a historic Texas dancehall turned antique show venue, located at 4217 TX-237 in Warrenton (mailing address Round Top, TX 78954). The building dates to 1903, making it one of the oldest dancehalls in Texas, and it has been an official stop on Texas Antiques Week since 1987. That's the slogan plastered on the merch: "Zapp Hall Style Since '87."

The venue is named for the Zapp family, the original owners. The Evans family stewarded the property for more than five decades, from 1968 into the 2020s, transforming it from a community hall into a Warrenton landmark. Today, Kay and Taylor own and operate Zapp Hall — only the third ownership in the building's 120-plus-year history. That continuity matters. Zapp Hall has the same vibe it had ten and twenty years ago because the people running it actually live and breathe this place.

Geographically, Zapp Hall sits in the heart of the Warrenton stretch of the antique corridor — about five miles south of Round Top proper, along Highway 237. Warrenton is the budget-friendly, open-air, dig-through-the-bins half of the show. Round Top has Marburger Farm and the curated tents. Warrenton has Bar W Field, Excess I & II, Bull Market, and the headliner: Zapp Hall. Locals will tell you that if you only have one day in Warrenton, Zapp is the venue you have to hit.

What to Expect

Zapp Hall is a hybrid venue, which is what makes it unusual. Most Warrenton spots are pure open-air field shows: rows of dealers under their own tents with their tailgates dropped. Zapp Hall has the historic indoor dancehall anchoring the property, surrounded by outdoor tented and open-field dealer areas. That means you get the best of both worlds — climate-protected indoor browsing for vintage and antique dealers inside the hall, and the classic Warrenton tent-and-table experience outside.

It is also a social venue in a way most field shows aren't. There's a stage. There's live music throughout show week. There's a bar — known to regulars as The Bubble Lounge — and there's food onsite from Royer's Cafe, the legendary Round Top kitchen serving Southern favorites. Most field shows pack up at dusk. Zapp Hall keeps going. The "legendary evenings" and special event nights (including the famous Prom Night) are part of why Zapp has been covered by Country Living, HGTV, Cowgirl, and HuffPost.

So expect: a working antique show by day, a Texas dancehall party by night, and a meeting point for the entire Warrenton crowd in between.

What You'll Find at Zapp Hall

Zapp Hall's tagline is "antiques, art, and all-around good company," and that's a fair summary. Dealers come from across the country and rotate by season, but the consistent mix leans toward:

Texas and Western Americana

This is dancehall country. Expect vintage cowboy gear, ranch decor, hand-tooled leather, old Texas signage, longhorn pieces, oil-patch memorabilia, and folk art with a Lone Star bent. If you're decorating a Hill Country home or a ranch, Zapp Hall should be your first stop.

Primitive and Country Furniture

Pine cupboards, farm tables, dough bowls, benches, blanket chests, jelly cabinets — the kind of honest, sturdy pieces that built Texas Antiques Week's reputation in the first place. Inside the hall and under the tents you'll find both refinished pieces and "as-found" furniture ready for a project.

Vintage Smalls and Collectibles

This is where Zapp shines for casual shoppers. Enamelware, ironstone, vintage advertising tins, milk glass, transferware, brass candlesticks, old kitchen tools, mercury glass, and the kind of $5-to-$50 smalls that go straight into your trunk.

Folk Art and One-of-a-Kind Pieces

Hand-carved figures, painted signs, naive paintings, found-object sculpture, and the occasional weird-but-wonderful piece that makes Round Top Round Top.

Vintage Clothing, Textiles, and Jewelry

Quilts, grain sacks, vintage western wear, turquoise, sterling, old buckles, and one-off costume pieces — usually scattered between dealers rather than concentrated in one spot.

Mid-Century and Industrial

Less dominant than the primitive stock but present. Industrial lighting, factory carts, mid-century chairs, and the kind of pieces that fit in modern lofts as easily as in farmhouses.

The vibe is hunt-and-discover rather than walk-up-and-buy. You're not browsing a curated showroom; you're picking through dealers who set up their own booths, priced their own goods, and are sitting in folding chairs ready to deal.

Prices at Zapp Hall

Here's the most important thing to know about Warrenton in general and Zapp Hall specifically: prices are real. This is field-show pricing, not Marburger Farm pricing. You can find:

  • Smalls in the $5–$50 range — vintage glassware, enamelware, costume jewelry, small framed art
  • Decorative pieces in the $50–$300 range — primitive bowls, ironstone collections, decorative furniture pieces, mid-size signs
  • Furniture typically $200–$2,000 — though hero pieces and exceptional folk art can run higher

Compared to Marburger Farm or The Compound, expect to pay 30 to 60 percent less for comparable inventory. The trade-off is presentation: you're digging, not browsing a styled vignette.

A few price-related rules of the road at Zapp Hall:

Bring cash. Many dealers take cards and Venmo now, but cash is still king at Warrenton. It speeds up checkout and often unlocks better prices. Pull cash from your bank before driving in — the local ATMs run dry by mid-week.

Negotiating is expected. Asking "What's your best price?" is not rude here. It's the language of the show. Dealers price with room to move, especially on bigger pieces and later in the week.

Bundle to save. If you're buying multiple items from the same dealer, ask for a combined price. Two $40 pieces frequently turn into $65 if you ask nicely.

Cash for cash. The phrase "cash today" still moves the needle. A dealer staring at a $400 tag will often take $325 in twenties on the spot.

Hours and Admission

Admission to Zapp Hall is free. Like every Warrenton venue, you do not need a ticket, wristband, or early-buy pass to walk in. This is one of the great gifts of the Warrenton corridor — the entire stretch is open-admission, even during the biggest antique event in the country.

Show hours during the Fall 2026 Show (October 16–31, 2026):

  • Daily: 10am to 6pm
  • Special event nights run extended hours (live music, prom night, and other evening events — check zapphall.com or @zapphall on Instagram for the current schedule)

Spring 2027 dates will follow the standard Texas Antiques Week calendar; check our Round Top show dates page for the latest official dates.

If you want first crack at the inventory, plan to be at the gate at 10am sharp on opening day. If you want a quieter shopping experience, weekdays during the middle of the run are noticeably calmer than the opening weekend.

Location and Parking

Address: 4217 TX-237, Round Top, TX 78954

Despite the Round Top mailing address, the venue is physically in Warrenton, on the west side of Highway 237 as you drive south from Round Top. You'll see Zapp Hall's distinctive historic dancehall building with tented dealer areas spreading around it. If you hit Bar W Field, you've gone slightly too far south. If you're still passing Round Top fields, you haven't gone far enough.

Parking at Zapp Hall is on-site and free during most of the show, with overflow parking in adjacent fields handled by attendants during peak days. Get there early to park close — by 11am on a Saturday during peak week, you may end up parking several hundred yards out and walking in. Wear shoes you can hike in.

A note on Highway 237 during show season: this two-lane road becomes the most congested stretch in Fayette County. From the opening Saturday through the following weekend, plan for slow crawls between venues. Don't try to "swing by Zapp Hall on the way to dinner" — give it real time.

When to Visit Zapp Hall

The Round Top calendar is roughly three weeks long, and your strategy at Zapp Hall depends on what you're after.

For the best selection: Opening days

The first three or four days of the Warrenton run are when dealers have their freshest inventory. Hero pieces — the rare painted cupboard, the standout folk art, the killer Western sign — go fast. If you want first dibs, be at Zapp Hall on the first or second day of the show, at the 10am opening.

For the best deals: The final weekend

By the final Saturday and Sunday, dealers are doing math. Packing up unsold inventory and hauling it home is expensive and exhausting. The last 48 hours of the show are when you'll see the deepest discounts — sometimes 30 to 50 percent off marked prices on bigger pieces. The trade-off is thinner selection, but if you have a flexible eye, the value is unmatched.

For atmosphere: Friday and Saturday nights

If you want to experience Zapp Hall the way it's meant to be experienced — music on the stage, drinks at The Bubble Lounge, Royer's plates, the whole social scene — come for an evening event. The shopping winds down, but the energy ramps up.

Best time of day: Right at open or in the last hour

Mid-day (noon to 3pm) is the busiest, hottest, and slowest-shopping window. Show up at 10am sharp for first picks, or roll in at 5pm when crowds thin and dealers are loosening up on prices.

Zapp Hall vs. Other Warrenton Venues

Warrenton has more than 22 distinct venues. Here's how Zapp Hall stacks up against the other big names.

Zapp Hall vs. Bar W Field

Bar W Field is the giant. Hundreds of dealers across acres of open field — signs, furniture, garden, smalls, the works. It is the quintessential Warrenton experience: pure outdoor, dig-through-everything, walk-until-your-feet-hurt shopping.

Choose Zapp Hall when you want a more concentrated experience with food, music, indoor browsing, and a historic-venue atmosphere. Choose Bar W when you want maximum dealer count and don't mind committing hours to walking acres.

Zapp Hall vs. Excess I & II

Excess I and II are the storage-unit-style venues across from each other, packed with around 50+ vendors heavy on European imports. They're great for finding French antiques, painted European furniture, and unique imported pieces that need digging.

Choose Zapp Hall for Texas Americana, folk art, primitives, and the social scene. Choose Excess when you're hunting European imports and don't mind tight aisles.

Zapp Hall vs. Bull Market

Bull Market is another popular field show — open-air, rotating dealers, vintage and handmade goods. It's a younger, slightly more contemporary crowd of dealers than Zapp.

Choose Zapp Hall for the historic-venue atmosphere and the broader range of traditional antiques. Choose Bull Market when you want a more design-y, curated outdoor field.

The honest answer: hit all four if you have a full day in Warrenton. They're all within walking distance of each other along 237.

Tips for Shopping Zapp Hall

A field-tested checklist for getting the most out of your day:

  • Bring cash. $300–$500 in twenties is a reasonable starting kit for a casual day. Bring more if you're hunting furniture.
  • Wear real shoes. Boots or sturdy sneakers. The dancehall floor is hard, the tent areas are gravel and grass, and you'll log five miles without trying.
  • Dress for the weather. Fall shows can swing from 80 degrees and humid to 50 degrees and windy in 24 hours. Layers. Hat. Sunscreen.
  • Bring a tote bag or rolling cart. Smalls add up fast and dealers don't always have great wrapping.
  • Negotiate freely but kindly. "Best price?" is fine. Lowballing 75 percent below ask is not.
  • Save dealer cards. If you see something you love but want to think about it, take the dealer's card. You can text or call to hold a piece while you walk other venues.
  • Photograph as you go. Tag photos with booth location so you can find your way back.
  • Eat at Royer's onsite. The pies are not a rumor. The chicken-fried steak is real. Skip the drive into town for lunch.
  • Charge your phone. You'll use the Round Top Finder map to navigate, take pictures of pieces, message your spouse, and lose battery fast.

Getting There from Round Top or Marburger Farm

Zapp Hall is roughly 4–5 miles south of central Round Top, all along Highway 237. From the town square in Round Top, you'll drive south past The Compound and Blue Hills, then into the Warrenton stretch. Zapp Hall is on the west side of 237, well-signed during show season.

From Marburger Farm: Even shorter. Marburger sits between Round Top and Warrenton on 237, so Zapp Hall is about a 3-mile drive south. Plan on 15 to 25 minutes during peak traffic, despite the short distance — Highway 237 backs up badly during show week.

A traffic tip: locals use Wagner Road and other side roads to bypass the worst of 237 congestion during peak hours. If you're staying in Round Top and headed to Warrenton midday, ask your B&B host for the current local workaround.

For a turn-by-turn view with all the major venues plotted, use our interactive Round Top map. It's built for exactly this kind of corridor navigation.

What Zapp Hall Is Best For

Putting it all together, here's when Zapp Hall should be at the top of your itinerary:

  • You want one venue that captures the soul of Warrenton. Historic building, outdoor tents, real dealers, food, music — Zapp is the most complete single stop.
  • You're hunting Texas Americana, primitives, or folk art. This is Zapp's sweet spot.
  • You want field-show prices without committing to a full day in the dust. The hybrid indoor/outdoor format lets you take breaks without leaving the venue.
  • You want to feel the social side of Round Top. Royer's onsite, live music, evening events. Zapp Hall is where the show becomes a party.
  • You only have a few hours in Warrenton. Hit Zapp first. Then walk Bar W if you have time.

Zapp Hall FAQ

Is Zapp Hall free to enter?

Yes. Like every venue along the Warrenton corridor, admission to Zapp Hall is free. No tickets, no wristbands, no early-buy passes. You just walk in.

When does Zapp Hall open?

During the Fall 2026 Show (October 16–31, 2026), Zapp Hall is open daily from 10am to 6pm, with extended hours for special event nights featuring live music. Spring show dates follow the official Texas Antiques Week calendar — see our Round Top show dates page.

What can I find at Zapp Hall?

Texas and Western Americana, primitive and country furniture, vintage smalls and collectibles, folk art, vintage clothing and textiles, and a mix of mid-century and industrial pieces. Plus food at Royer's Cafe and drinks at The Bubble Lounge.

How big is Zapp Hall?

Zapp Hall combines the historic 1903 dancehall building with surrounding tented and open-field dealer areas. The venue doesn't publish an exact vendor count or acreage, but plan on giving it two to four hours to walk thoroughly during show week.

Is there parking at Zapp Hall?

Yes — free on-site parking, with overflow fields handled by attendants during peak days. Arrive before 11am on weekends to park close. Otherwise, expect a walk in.

Can I bring my dog to Zapp Hall?

Most Warrenton venues are dog-friendly during show season, and Zapp Hall has historically welcomed leashed pets. Bring water for them — the asphalt and dust get rough by mid-afternoon.

Where do I park for Zapp Hall?

On-site at 4217 TX-237. Follow attendant directions during the show. If main lots are full, overflow parking will be marked.

Does Zapp Hall take credit cards?

Individual dealers set their own payment policies. Most accept cards and Venmo. Cash still gets the best prices.


Make Zapp Hall Part of Your Round Top Trip

Zapp Hall isn't just a stop — it's the anchor of the Warrenton experience. If you're planning your show week, start with our complete Warrenton guide, check the official Round Top show dates, browse vendors appearing across the corridor, and pull up the interactive map to plan your route.

Round Top is a big show. Warrenton is the heart of the deal hunting. And Zapp Hall is the heart of Warrenton. Bring cash, wear good shoes, and save room on Royer's pie.

See you under the tents.

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