The Webster

01-20 designs The Webster’s brand on presence, wonder and connection.


London-based agency 01-20 was commissioned to create its brand positioning, identity and content, along with a set of bespoke illustrations by Debora Szpilman. The brand spans two cities, with each property shaped by its neighbourhood while sharing a cohesive identity.


The identity revolves around an idea 01-20 calls “the magic of presence.” “It emerged very early in the process,” explains Senior Partner Carla Pia Sutil. “We were observing a wider cultural tension: people are more connected than ever digitally, yet often less emotionally or socially present. Hospitality has become increasingly transactional or performative, particularly within luxury, and we wanted The Webster to push against that.” For the creative direction, the studio looked to Gabriel García Márquez, the Colombian writer associated with magical realism – the literary genre that takes a grounded, real setting and introduces subtle moments of wonder. Márquez stayed at the original Webster Hotel in New York, a biographical thread that gave 01-20 its creative anchor.


Translating a literary genre into a visual system carried an obvious risk, and Pia is direct about how the studio held the line. “We never wanted magical realism to become a superficial visual gimmick or something overly theatrical. The approach was always rooted in reality first.” The team began with the actual buildings, their locations, their literary connections and architectural character, then layered subtle intrigue through colour, typography, art direction, illustration and tone. Márquez supplied the spirit of the work, with the world of Charles Dickens informing the brand’s more eccentric, English character.


The wordmark is where the concept is front and centre. The Webster is set in a high-contrast serif, drawn from the early 20th-century typography of New York and London publishing culture, the newspapers, journals and literary institutions of the period. In the ‘We’ lockup, the ‘W’ is built from two overlapping ‘U’ forms. “This subtly reinforces ideas of togetherness, exchange and collective presence,” Pia details. “It reflects this notion of a meeting of minds, which became central to the identity system.”


Typography, colour and image direction extend the same balance of refinement and warmth. The palette consists of terracotta, oxblood and soft off-whites, drawing from historic interiors, literary salons, old publishing houses and the personalities behind the brand, with the earthy tones referencing the buildings and brighter accents carrying the spontaneity Pia associates with García Márquez. “Warmth was essential from the beginning. We wanted The Webster to feel human, social and emotionally inviting rather than cold, overly minimal or overtly luxurious.”


Szpilman’s commissioned illustrations sit alongside found photography and a moodboard-style collage language. “Her work has a social quality to it; expressive characters, intimate moments, a sense of movement and interaction,” Pia explains. The studio rationed her work carefully, reserving illustration for moments where it wanted to heighten intrigue and leaning on photography to keep the brand grounded in real people and real environments.


Much of the brand comes alive through what happens inside the hotels. The Webster newspaper sits in reception as a nod to the Overseas Press Club history of the Manhattan building, and the programming leans into each city’s social and cultural calendar. Book launches, readings, music and art events run through the hotels, alongside a social scene built with the local tastemakers who shape each neighbourhood, drawing on the best of the surroundings and staying rooted in them. A literary thread runs through it all, fitting for a brand that shares its name with Noah Webster, the lexicographer. “The intention was never to create gimmicks, but to introduce small moments of meaning and surprise that enrich the stay without interrupting it,” Pia notes.


The brief that set all of this in motion came from Masterworks. “Create a hospitality brand that feels culturally rich, socially magnetic and genuinely distinctive in an increasingly crowded market,” Kendall Viola, VP of Marketing, tells us. “Ultimately, the brief was simple: create places people don’t want to leave.” Seeing the framework land in physical space has been the part Viola points to, from a dramatic lobby mural in London to flooring made from reclaimed marble offcuts, each property interpreting the same spirit through its own history. “The Webster was never intended to be a formula. It was designed as a framework for storytelling.”

All images © of their respective owners.
Content taken from The Webster

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