In the heart of Chicago’s West Loop, a district defined by its history of industrial rhythm and constant reinvention, a new experimental venue is challenging the traditional boundaries between retail and hospitality. Postcard Chicago, conceived by the Vancouver-based studio Ste Marie in collaboration with travel brand Monos, arrives not as a static flagship but as a “vessel for exploration”. It is a project that asks what happens when a brand moves beyond the physical product to curate a lived, sensory experience—one that functions as part listening bar, part social experiment, and part community invitation.

A conceptual shift from object to atmosphere anchors the project’s identity. While the adjoining Monos retail space acts as a contemplative gallery of sculptural forms and limewashed walls, Postcard serves as its kinetic counterpart. Ste Marie has designed the 2,901-square-foot space to unfold around the choreography of gathering, translating the stillness of a travel brand into the fluid movement of a modern café and lounge. This dual nature creates a dialogue between two distinct environments: one designed for the acquisition of goods, and the other for the cultivation of memory through sound and light.

The integration of high-fidelity acoustics serves as the primary structural element of the interior. Rather than treating music as a background layer, the studio collaborated with sound engineers Uncanned to build a foundation of vintage JBL speakers and a bespoke DJ booth equipped with Technics turntables. This technical precision is balanced by the cultural curation of Alejandro Ayala (DJ King Hippo), whose music program draws from the city’s deep record culture. By placing the listening experience at the center of the floor plan, the layout is effectively “tuned” to the movement of its patrons, echoing Chicago’s legacy as the birthplace of house music.

Materiality and sensory design work in tandem to create an environment that feels both monolithic and soft. The palette is a sophisticated blend of tactile textures: buttery CTL leather upholstery, sheer Alendel drapery that diffuses natural light, and timber panels that ground the room’s vertical proportions. Analog elements—including vintage CRT monitors and projected archival imagery—introduce a layer of visual texture that anchors the modern space in a sense of nostalgia. Every detail, from the warm dimming of the Boca Flasher linear cove lights to the cool touch of the Corian Pearl Gray countertops, is treated as a continuous act of design intended to make the operational complexity of the venue feel effortless.

A collaborative spirit defines the hospitality program, ensuring the venue is deeply rooted in its local context. The menu, developed with consultants like Chef Daniel Costa, features a precise selection of zero-proof cocktails and dishes sourced from esteemed Chicago partners such as Publican Quality Bread, Metric Coffee, and Rare Tea Cellars. This network of local artisans grounds the Monos sensibility in the community, transforming a global brand’s vision into a neighborhood fixture. It is a framework designed for longevity through adaptation, intended to be the first in a series of spaces that can shift and reappear in new cities.

The evolution of the studio’s narrative-driven approach continues to redefine urban hospitality across North America. Postcard Chicago represents a strategic expansion of the cinematic language Ste Marie has previously explored in projects like Mimi, a high-fidelity cinematic lounge in Edmonton, where sound and atmosphere also take center stage. Similarly, the studio’s ability to ground a concept in local culture while maintaining a distinct visual identity was recently showcased at the Olia restaurant in Edmonton, where the dialogue between materials and community is equally central. By focusing on possibility rather than permanence, Postcard Chicago stands as a testament to how thoughtful intervention can turn a commercial footprint into a resonant cultural landmark, where the act of travel is translated into the simple, deliberate ease of being present.




