Security guard, 72, behind design of Nike's new Shinjuku store

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Security guard, 72, behind design of Nike’s new Shinjuku store | The Asahi Shimbun: Breaking News, Japan News and Analysis

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The Asahi Shimbun

Culture<br>People<br>article

Security guard, 72, behind design of Nike’s new Shinjuku store

By NOZOMI MATSUKAWA/ Staff Writer

May 17, 2026 at 07:00 JST

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The logo adorning the exterior of the “Nike Shinjuku” store, which opened in April in Tokyo, was designed by Shuetsu Sato, a 72-year-old security guard. He spoke about his surprise upon receiving the offer from Nike and how he poured his ideas into the design. (Nozomi Matsukawa.) (Some of the footage was provided by Nike Japan.)

Shuetsu Sato holds a handmade version of his font before the “Nike Shinjuku” ad on April 10. (Nozomi Matsukawa)

For decades, humble signs hand-cut from industrial tape have guided millions of commuters through the labyrinth of Tokyo’s Shinjuku Station.

With plump, rounded characters saying, for example, “East Exit this way” or “Keep to the left here,” the guideposts have been a charming old-style feature in a world of flickering digital screens.

Now, that same font, born from a utility knife and a roll of tape, is splashed over a new store for a global sportswear titan.

The digital signs on the exteriors of four floors of the “Nike Shinjuku” store blaze just outside the station’s East Exit. They feature rounded kanji for “Shinjuku,” with the iconic Nike swoosh embedded as a stroke in “juku.”

The artist behind the design isn’t a trendy graphic designer from a high-powered agency. He’s Shuetsu Sato, a 72-year-old who has worked as a security guard for 28 years.

Sato is also the one who hand-crafted the tape signs inside the station.

His shift runs in the quiet hours between the last train at night and the first in the morning. In that time, he guides heavy machinery that loads steel frames and keeps watch for passing trains to prevent accidents at the station’s construction sites.

On April 10, when the Nike Shinjuku store opened, he gazed up at his own font glowing on a screen 2 meters high and over 3 meters wide.

“It’s 200 out of 100,” Sato said, having just arrived for his overnight shift. “They did such a great job finishing it. I’m surprised it’s being featured this prominently.”

AN EXTRA TOUCH

The font’s journey from station walls to global brand began out of necessity.

Around 2004, construction had turned Shinjuku Station into a maze. Sato, then working security, was constantly asked for directions by overwhelmed passengers. Answering each person verbally felt inadequate.

“I’ll make some signs,” he decided.

He started by tearing up protective tape from the construction site and sticking pieces to scrap panels. His mentality, he recalled, was, “If the station officials get angry, I can just peel it off.”

One day, a frustrated commuter grabbed him by the collar, yelling, “I want to get through here!”

Sato, who had worked in a bank and a coffee shop, had always prided himself on putting himself in the customer’s shoes. So, the encounter with the angry commuter struck a chord.

He realized the signs needed more than just information; they needed empathy.

He added an “extra touch” by rounding the corners of the tape letters with his utility knife, hoping to “relieve even a little bit of the commuters’ frustration and irritation.”

A native of Hanamaki, Iwate Prefecture, Sato has never studied design and was, by his own admission, bad at calligraphy.

But a high school art class had left him fascinated by the clean, straight lines of the Gothic font. The aesthetic stuck with him and later influenced the style of his handmade letters.

These carefully crafted signs—plump, rounded and mysteriously charming—began to resonate with commuters at Shinjuku Station.

Sato said he can’t forget the joy he felt one day when an elderly woman with a bent back stood in front of a sign and told him, “This is the kind of sign I wanted.”

Before long, fans had nicknamed his work the “Shuetsu font,” and orders for signs and shop logos from outside the station began to pour in.

His work was formally recognized last year with an award from the Japan Sign Design Association.

For years, a growing circle of admirers knew the secret of the station’s signs.

One of those fans was graphic designer Shun Sasaki.

THE DESIGNER’S EYE

Sixteen years ago, Sasaki, a recent graduate of Tama Art University, discovered the tape signs all over JR Nippori Station, where Sato was then working.

“These letters are interesting,” Sasaki thought.

He investigated and learned they were...

shinjuku station nike sato signs from

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