Nashville in the mid-2010s was filling up fast. New hotels were opening constantly, tourism was accelerating, and the city's hospitality market was getting crowded. Union Station had something none of the new builds had — a 125-year-old Gothic train station on Broadway, a soaring lobby atrium, a history that predated the city's modern identity. The question was how to make that legible, coherent, and competitive in a market that was suddenly paying attention.
The hotel had just completed a full interior renovation and wanted a brand to match. ST8MNT brought me in as Creative Director and Brand Strategist to lead the engagement, with an Art Director and two designers on the team.

The strategic anchor we landed on after discovery: the monogram. A single USH mark designed to live everywhere — pressed into the tile mosaic at the entrance, embroidered on staff cuffs, stamped into leather, suspended from suspender hardware, printed across pocket squares and bow ties. The logic was that a hotel with this much physical presence needed a brand that worked the same way. Not a logo applied to things. A mark woven into the place itself.

Everything followed from that decision. The color system — Chambray Blue, Palliser Copper, the warmth of aged brass and dark wood — pulled from the building's own materials and history.

The primary typeface brought the historical weight the architecture deserved.

The vertical wordmark treatment echoed the station's tower.

The copper foil on stationery, the illustrated Nashville map, the "out too late" door hanger, the digital press kit — each a touchpoint carrying the same voice and the same level of care.
The tile mosaic at the entrance was designed by our team, executed by the renovation contractor — the brand literally built into the building's floor before a guest ever checked in.
And out front, a custom typographic sculpture — over six feet tall, fabricated from our design — put the wordmark in the street, visible from Broadway, part of the hotel's physical presence in the city.

The result was a brand system deep enough to dress a hotel from the sidewalk to the staff uniform to the room service menu.
