The cocktail-forward lifestyle hotel brand set to shake things up in 2025

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Opening in early 2025 in Savannah, Georgia, is Municipal Grand, the inaugural hotel for cocktail-forward lifestyle hotel brand Midnight Auteur, which launched in March.  

The brand is the brainchild of the founders of the Death & Co. cocktail brand as well as Ryan Diggins, the founder of Denver’s boutique Ramble Hotel. The partners first collaborated when Death & Co. opened its second location in the hotel’s lobby. The bar and lobby were interchangeable, and so their unique cocktail-anchored hotel experience was born. 

Now the partners are taking that concept nationwide and building a brand around it. Created on the basis of thoughtful, personalized and local hospitality offerings, Midnight Auteur steps on the scene as travelers are increasingly craving unique experiences, especially in food and beverage. 

Ahead of Municipal Grand’s 2025 opening, Hotel Dive sat down with Diggins, partner and CEO of Midnight Auteur, to discuss how Denver’s Ramble Hotel inspired the cocktail-focused flag and how the brand will stand apart from others in the rapidly expanding lifestyle space. 

A budding brand

Midnight Auteur’s launch earlier this year coincided with Death & Co.’s first hotel location, The Ramble Hotel, celebrating its sixth year open in Denver’s hip River North arts district. The Ramble acts as a “springboard” for the new lifestyle brand and will influence its hotel projects to come, according to Diggins. 

Since opening, The Ramble Hotel has become a Denver staple and filled a gap for quality lifestyle hospitality in the growing River North neighborhood, Diggins said, recalling a time when the now-bustling corner where The Ramble sits was a vacant lot. 

In the mid-2010s, Diggins was sending everyone who came to visit Denver to River North, where music, food, art and nightlife were beginning to converge in the formerly industrial neighborhood. There was only one problem: The area was in desperate need of a hotel, a unique boutique hotel to be exact, Diggins thought. 

But it couldn’t be just any boutique hotel. Diggins imagined one with style, that was community-forward and -driven, and would cause some buzz. The hotel Denver needed, he thought, was one that “could hit the zeitgeist of the times” but also hold up over the years — the likes of The Bowery Hotel in Manhattan’s Lower East Side or Sunset Tower in Los Angeles’ West Hollywood neighborhood, he said.  

His idea became a reality in 2018, when on that once-vacant parcel in River North, he opened The Ramble Hotel. And what would make the property particularly unique was Death & Co.’s second bar location, the focal point of its lobby. 

Founded in 2006, Death & Co. has a flagship establishment in New York City’s East Village. The cocktail-centered brand also has bar locations in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

Following its success as a staple of The Ramble Hotel, Death & Co. teamed with Diggins to expand the cocktail-centered hotel concept nationwide, officially launching the partnership earlier this year. 

The founders share an intention to operate hotels that “immerse guests fully and seamlessly between social spaces and retreat,” according to a brand statement obtained by Hotel Dive. And with that mission in mind, they set out to bring their cocktail-anchored experience — one in which the hotel lobby is interchangeable with the bar — to Savannah and beyond. 

Midnight Auteur transcends a trends-oriented culture, though, Diggins noted. “In an industry that is so focused on trends, we’re really committed to the classics — great cocktails, a strong barista program, a perfect night’s sleep, warm hospitality and quality craftsmanship and materiality,” he said. 

Authenticity matters

The secret to a great lifestyle concept, Diggins noted, is the authenticity behind it.

“Authentic local experience, if that’s dreamed up in a boardroom, it’s not going to have the soul we’re trying to [create],” he said, telling Hotel Dive that being hyper-focused on the trends surrounding experiential travel has led many hotels to create filler or checklist amenities. Diggins said it’s imperative not to “create amenities for amenities’ sake.” 


“In an industry that is so focused on trends, we’re really committed to the classics — great cocktails, a strong barista program, a perfect night’s sleep, warm hospitality and quality craftsmanship and materiality.”

Ryan Diggins

Midnight Auteur Partner and CEO


“We are incredibly thoughtful in anything that is served or placed in the building. If we can’t justify its specific purpose, then it has no place in our hotel,” Diggins said. “This allows us to be trend-agnostic, and hopefully create hotels of permanence.” 

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