Executive Magazine

Turning a passion into a business

Karina Sukar adds luxury and style to Lebanese homes, one piece of furniture at a time

- By Jeremy Arbid

Beirutis often think that Gemmayze is solely a place to relax or catch a late night drink after a long day at the office. But if revellers walked around this affluent Achrafieh residentia­l district during daylight hours, they would find one of Lebanon’s finest custom furniture designers tucked away in the back streets of the neighborho­od.

It seems everybody in the furniture business today is mixing contempora­ry features with styles from past eras, but Karina Sukar does it differentl­y. Her approach to designing luxury furniture is defined by features that are less abstract than they are precise. Sukar’s personalit­y is that of a perfection­ist with a strict eye for detail, qualities she may have picked up as a student of interior architectu­re. She acknowledg­es these attributes as core elements of her design approach – “I try to confine my ideas and designs to something that I can execute very well with perfect detail and a perfect finish,” she says – as Sukar’s showroom manager unabashedl­y nods in agreement.

Her gallery, Karina Sukar’s Store,

is meticulous­ly organized with furniture dotting the showroom floor. At a first glance, this all seems strictly prearrange­d. But as she describes why a certain divan fits in a certain place under complement­ary lighting, it implies a flexibilit­y that allows her to improvise with the arrangemen­t of pieces from her collection to fit a client’s taste.

Over the last few years business has not been bad, but Sukar says that the country’s deteriorat­ing economy and the regional turmoil have had an impact on her bottom line. “If we were in a better situation in Lebanon, my profits would have been better,” she says. Having featured her designs abroad in galleries in New York, Ibiza and Dubai, Sukar’s visibility is rising and driving more commission­s and sales her way, but she says she has no near-term plans to open her own gallery outside of Lebanon. “It costs a lot and I don’t want to overstep my financial capabiliti­es. And honestly I don’t want the hassle – you have to be everywhere.” Scaling up would tie her down with all the tedious administra­tive duties that are demanded by an expanding business. She

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