Dearborn, Michigan

Where Art Meets Industry. Where Heritage Meets Innovation.

Irving R. Bacon spent 33 years documenting Henry Ford's vision through art. Today The Henry carries that legacy forward—308 rooms, museum-quality galleries, and 1,200-person event spaces. I see an opportunity to build systematic programming that honors the Ford/innovation story while creating signature annual activations that compound revenue year-round.

Track Record Highlights

#1 U.S. News & World Report Hotel in Iowa (2024 & 2025)
116 RevPAR Index
$1M+ Activation Revenue
80% Team Retention

Scale. Heritage. Systems.

308 rooms

Full-Service Complexity

I have experience working across a 521-key portfolio across four properties. The Henry operates at the same level of complexity I'm built for: multi-outlet F&B (TRIA, Henry's Bar), event spaces accommodating 1,200 guests, art gallery curation, and AAA Four Diamond service standards. This isn't a learning curve—it's pattern recognition.

165 years

Heritage as Programming Engine

Irving R. Bacon documented Ford's empire for 33 years. The Henry sits 1 mile from Ford World Headquarters, 3 miles from The Henry Ford Museum. I see this automotive/art heritage as a programming foundation—not just history to reference, but a story to activate. My work has always been about turning a building's legacy into revenue-generating experiences.

$1M+ proven

Systematic Programming

$1M+ in activation revenue since 2022—built through calendars that compound. The Henry already activates: art exhibitions, weddings, Ford campus proximity. I bring the methodology to systematize it: recurring series, seasonal tentpoles, premium experiences that layer on each other. Not inventing the wheel. Building the engine that keeps it turning.

See → Shape → Sell

See the Potential → Shape the Process → Sell the Product

See the Potential

Every property has untapped potential—in its spaces, its people, its place in the community. The work starts with seeing what's possible. TRIA could anchor Dearborn's culinary scene. The art galleries could drive programming. The Henry's location in Arab America could become a cultural bridge. Vision begins when you name what this place could become.

Shape the Process

Vision without culture is just a poster on the wall. Shaping the process means leading a team that knows why they're here—and feels empowered to deliver on that promise. It's the rituals, the recognition, the shared ownership. I lead by removing barriers and learning alongside the people doing the work.

Sell the Product

The product isn't a room. It's not a meal. It's the first-person experience of being served by a team with a defined vision and the culture to execute it. Guests feel something they can't quite explain—but they return for it. That feeling is the product.

Four Case Studies

The Community Relaunch (2,000+)

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See: The Warrior Hotel reopened in June 2020—mid-pandemic, to an empty town square. Zero buzz. Zero community connection. The question wasn't how do we get guests? It was how do we become part of this place?

Shape: We didn't do one ribbon cutting. We did six weeks of them. Spa ribbon cutting. Restaurant ribbon cutting. Rooftop bar ribbon cutting. Each one invited a different slice of Sioux City: business leaders, non-profits, city council, healthcare workers, families. We turned opening weekend into opening season. By week four, people were asking when's the next one? We manufactured FOMO for a building that had been closed for 40 years.

Sell: Over 2,000 people walked through the property in six weeks. The local paper ran five separate stories. City council started bringing delegations for tours. That awareness translated to wedding bookings, corporate holiday parties, and—most importantly—a standing perception that The Warrior wasn't just back. It was theirs. Community buy-in isn't a marketing tactic. It's the foundation for every dollar that comes after.

The Activation Engine ($1M+)

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See: Hotels treat activations like one-offs: a wine dinner here, a holiday party there. No compounding. No system. No memory. Revenue comes and goes. I saw an opportunity to build a calendar where every month has a signature moment, where guests return because they know what to expect, and where word-of-mouth becomes the marketing.

Shape: We built three layers. Recurring series: Ladies Night (third Thursday, every month), Sunday Brunch (with live music), Trivia Wednesdays. These were low-lift, high-frequency, and they trained guests to return. Seasonal tentpoles: 12 Days of Christmas (12 events, 12 charities, $60K raised), Grandparents Day Brunch, Halloween Spooktacular. These were marquee moments that drove rooms and F&B. Premium experiences: Chef's Table series, Eclipse Weekend (213 rooms, $87K revenue), NYE Gala ($47K, sold out). High ASP, high margin, waiting lists.

Sell: $1M+ in activation-driven revenue from 2022–present across The Warrior Hotel and Hotel Julien Dubuque. But the bigger win? We shifted the perception of the hotels from we're here if you need us to you need to be here for this. Activations became the reason to book, not the bonus once you do. That's when hotels stop chasing demand and start manufacturing it.

Building Teams That Stay (80%)

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See: Hospitality's retention crisis isn't about pay—it's about meaning. People leave because they don't feel seen, don't see a future, and don't believe their work matters. What if we built a culture where people actually wanted to stay? Not because they lacked options, but because they felt invested in?

Shape: We created a multi-layered recognition and development system. Monthly: Employee of the Month with real rewards—gift cards, prime parking, public celebration. Weekly: department-level shoutouts and in-the-moment acknowledgment. Annually: service anniversary celebrations, holiday parties, summer outings (trolley tours through historic districts, museum visits, team dinners). But recognition without development rings hollow. So we built career pathing infrastructure: identified high-potential associates early, created mentorship tracks, established cross-training opportunities, mapped clear promotion pathways. We celebrated internal promotions loudly. Every touchpoint reinforced the same message: You matter here. Your growth matters. Your future is here.

Sell: Retention climbed to 80%. Leadership retention increased 24%. We promoted 8 associates internally and mentored 14 team members into supervisor and management positions. Engagement scores jumped 27 points. But the real proof is in guest feedback: stable teams mean consistent service, familiar faces, associates who know preferences and anticipate needs. Teams that stay together learn together—and guests feel the difference in every interaction.

U.S. News & World Report #1 Hotel in Iowa (2024 & 2025)

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See: The Warrior Hotel was stunning—a restored icon brought back to life as part of Marriott's Autograph Collection. But it needed to become more than a building. It needed to become a benchmark. The opportunity was to create an operation so consistent, so guest-focused, and so culturally strong that it would define what excellence looked like for the entire market. The question was: What potential are we trying to actualize? The answer: sustained excellence.

Shape: We built systems that supported that vision. Every department aligned around one shared goal: deliver experiences that matched the promise of the brand and the pride of the property. Labor forecasting tied to occupancy. Menu engineering that balanced quality with cost. Guest recovery programs that transformed feedback into loyalty. Performance coaching became part of every department head's weekly flow, connecting guest satisfaction directly to profitability. Culture and performance moved together, not separately. The hotel began to hum—departments collaborating, data flowing, standards rising.

Sell: RevPAR lifted 25%. RGI increased 19.6%. Guest satisfaction rose 20 points. The Warrior was named Top Hotel in Iowa by U.S. News & World Report in both 2024 and 2025, earning its place as a symbol of consistent excellence in the state and across the Autograph portfolio. Awards followed, but what mattered most was what they represented: a culture that performed not for recognition, but because excellence had become habit.

Three Pillars. Twelve Months. One System.

The Henry activates beautifully—art exhibitions that draw collectors, weddings for 1,200, proximity to Ford campus. What I see is an opportunity to build on this foundation: connecting the art collection to F&B experiences, building signature annual programming rooted in The Henry's innovation legacy, and creating event packages that compound. Not starting from scratch. Building the system that makes it scale.

01

Art-Driven F&B

Solves: Non-hotel covers, rate integrity, destination positioning

Connect The Henry's museum-quality art collection (Picasso, Chagall, Peter Max) directly to the F&B experience. Monthly artist showcases paired with chef collaborations. Quarterly gallery openings with ticketed tastings. Partner with Detroit Institute of Arts for exhibition tie-ins. Build Sunday Brunch as an art experience—live painting, roaming galleries, chef's table with artist Q&As. Position Henry's Bar as the natural stop after The Henry Ford Museum.

02

Signature Annual Activation

Solves: Brand differentiation, community partnerships, year-round momentum

Build one major annual activation—similar to the 250 America program I'm launching in Dubuque. A 12-month thematic series with monthly tentpoles, community partnerships, and systematic programming tied to The Henry's innovation heritage. Partner with Ford Museum, Detroit Institute of Arts, local businesses, and community organizations. Create a repeatable structure: monthly themes, outlet activations, charity partners, capstone events. One big idea that compounds for 12 months.

03

The Events Engine

Solves: Rooms revenue, F&B minimums, midweek demand, utilization

Build tiered offerings around the 1,200-person capacity. Corporate: Ford supplier meetings, automotive conferences, leadership retreats. Social: Wedding packages tied to the art collection (couples choose their gallery backdrop), milestone celebrations, corporate galas. Premium: Chef's Table series in the gallery, Art & Wine events, New Year's Eve ticketed experiences. Launch "Preview Fridays"—monthly open-house tours for wedding planners, corporate meeting planners, and community organizations.

The Year at The Henry

A systematic calendar where every month tells a story—rooted in automotive heritage, artistic legacy, and American innovation. Not events for the sake of events. A rhythm that compounds.

January
Assembly Line Dreams

New year, new systems. Innovation Summit. Bacon's sketches of Ford's factory openings. Visionary Speaker Series. Building what comes next.

February
Iron & Canvas

Where industry meets art. Gallery After Dark. Steel sculptures. Bacon's factory paintings. Couples paint-and-sip. The machine as muse.

March
Women Who Build

Women's History Month. Female artists showcase. Women in automotive leadership panel. Mentorship breakfast series. Building the future together.

April
The Innovators

Celebrate innovation. Ford Museum partnership month. Speaker series with Detroit entrepreneurs. Student innovation showcase. Spring into creativity.

May
American Steel

Automotive heritage month. Classic car showcase. Bacon's Model T sketches. Ford Museum partnership. Chrome, leather, horsepower, history.

June
The Golden Age

Elegance. Prosperity. Art. Monthly gallery showcase. Couples celebrate in museum-quality surroundings. Preview events for wedding planners. Grand Ballroom revelations.

July
Independence & Innovation

Made in America showcase. Ford's July 4th celebrations documented by Bacon. Fireworks viewing package. Patriotic brunch.

August
The Artist's Studio

Irving R. Bacon retrospective. Artist residency program launch. Live painting demonstrations. Summer Art Camp for families.

September
The Empire Builders

Labor Day recognition. Bacon's worker portraits. Corporate networking series. Business leaders breakfast. Building legacies that last.

October
Forged in Fire

Craftsmanship month. Fall Art Fair. Metalwork demonstrations. Gallery Spooktacular. Harvest market. The art of making.

November
The Harvest

Abundance. Thanksgiving community dinner. Bacon's holiday factory scenes. Gratitude breakfast series. Gathering what we've built.

December
The Great Celebration

12 Days of Giving. NYE Gala in Grand Ballroom. Holiday art market. Winter Wonderland packages. Ending the year magnificently.

Every Month, Six Touchpoints

Tentpole

Signature monthly event

Outlets

TRIA, Henry's Bar, Gallery activations

Rooms

Themed package

Email

Month-specific campaign

Charity

Local partner tie-in

Capstone

Month-ending experience

250 America at Hotel Julien Dubuque

This year, I launched 250 America—a year-long activation celebrating America's 250th anniversary at Hotel Julien Dubuque. Twelve monthly themes. Dozens of community partnerships. Systematic programming that turns one concept into 365 days of momentum.

This is the model: pick one big idea rooted in the property's story, build a 12-month calendar around it, partner with community organizations, create repeatable structures. Not starting from scratch every month. Building a system that compounds.

I would love to build a signature annual activation at The Henry like this. Whether it's innovation, art, automotive heritage, or American craftsmanship—the methodology works. One year. Twelve months. Dozens of partners. Systematic programming that becomes the property's identity.

250 America 12-Month Calendar

250 America: 12-month thematic activation at Hotel Julien Dubuque celebrating American innovation, heritage, and community

12
Monthly Themes
Dozens
Community Partners
1
Big Idea

The Building's Story

Where Innovation Meets Heritage

The Henry stands on ground that shaped American industry. Dearborn gave birth to the assembly line, the $5 workday, and the democratization of the automobile. Henry Ford didn't just build cars—he built a vision of what America could be. And he hired Irving R. Bacon to document it all.

For 33 years, Bacon was Ford's eyes and hands, capturing everything from factory floor innovations to the Golden Jubilee of the incandescent light bulb. His photographs, paintings, and cartoons weren't marketing—they were history being written in real time. Today, The Henry Hotel carries that legacy forward, with museum-quality art adorning every wall.

The hotel sits one mile from Ford World Headquarters, three miles from The Henry Ford Museum—the largest indoor-outdoor museum complex in the United States. This proximity isn't just geographic convenience. It's positioning as the natural extension of the innovation story. Guests visiting the museum. Ford suppliers meeting on campus. Automotive conferences. This is where that world stays.

The Henry needs a GM who sees this legacy as a programming foundation—who can turn Bacon's artistic documentation into chef collaborations, Ford's innovation into speaker series, the museum proximity into partnership revenue. Not just honoring history. Activating it.

1914

Irving R. Bacon joins Ford Motor Company as artist-in-residence, beginning 33-year documentation of Ford's industrial empire

1929

Bacon paints "Golden Jubilee" celebration—Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone at dedication of Edison Institute

1933

Greenfield Village opens—Henry Ford's vision to preserve American innovation and history through immersive experiences

1947

Irving Bacon retires after 33 years documenting Ford's vision—leaving behind extensive archive of paintings, photographs, cartoons

2003

The Henry Ford Museum undergoes major expansion, becoming largest indoor-outdoor museum complex in United States

Today

The Henry stands as tribute to this legacy—308 rooms, museum-quality galleries, destination for innovation story told through art and hospitality

Let's Talk

U.S. News & World Report #1 Hotel in Iowa, Business of the Year 2025, AAA 4 Diamond, 116 RevPAR Index, 70% rooms flow-through, 80% retention. Ready to lead The Henry's next chapter.