🪑☕ Cairopolitan’s gallery-style space in Garden City is not your average souvenir shop. No sphinxes, no pyramids, and no papyrus. Instead, you’ll find yourself surrounded by an eclectic array of objects that depict Cairo’s contemporary urban history — think colorful posters, kitschy memorabilia, classic blue and white Egyptian street signs, and much more.
The creative concept store/design house came into being when founder Ahmed Hefnawy grew tired of a market flooded with cliché, low-quality Egyptian souvenirs produced in China. Before Cairopolitan ever saw the light of day, Hefnawy, a former art director at Leo Burnett, spent more than a decade designing, prototyping, and creating objects that captured the grit and charm of contemporary Cairene life.
His designs were a far cry from the standard commercially available souvenirs fixated on Egypt’s Pharaonic past. “He wanted to launch an entire collection, not a single product,” explains Nelly El Sharkawy, the architect and photographer who joined as partner in 2017 to professionalize the dream.
The duo officially opened the doors to their Garden City flagship in 2018. They launched with 14 products that reimagined components of everyday life in Cairo through a lens of irony, humor, and conceptual design. Their items range from whimsical home accessories, like candles in the shape of traditional market scale weights, to accessories like Egyptian rubber flip flop (el zanouba) keychains, notebooks designed to look like oversized Egyptian passports, and Cleopatra cigarette box laptop cases.
A true DIY approach to manufacturing: Unlike other local manufacturers who specialize in a single niche, Cairopolitan’s competitive edge is built on what El Sharkawy calls “non-specialization.” Their catalog spans metal, wood, tin, wax, and textiles sourced from across the country. This kind of breadth requires a mad scientist approach to the supply chain, she explains. If a mold or template doesn't exist, they build it themselves.
While they collaborate with traditional craftsmen to maintain authentic know-how, the assembly and quality control happen in their own workshops. “In Egypt, there’s always the fear of ‘what if something happens to this person?’ An entire production line will stop,” El Sharkawy says, referring to a pottery line they used to carry that was permanently discontinued after the master craftsman passed away. To mitigate this risk, they’ve embarked on their own mini process of industrialization by teaching artisans the proprietary techniques to ensure quality, scalability, and continuity in their product lines.
The transition from a creative collective to a systems-based enterprise was accelerated by an unfortunate incident. In their first four years of operation, the founders — who both come from artistic backgrounds — prioritized hiring craftsmen over accountants, and operated through a combination of Excel and gut instinct. In 2021, they discovered their store manager had been siphoning off mns over the years. “It was a turning point,” El Sharkawy tells us. The fallout forced a complete overhaul of the business, moving from manual tracking to a formal ERP system that put them on track for the impressive expansion they are undergoing today.
Cairopolitan also helped facilitate the print craze that is now a fixture of the Cairo design landscape. Making art more accessible was a driving force behind the creation of the annual Cairo Prints exhibition back in 2018. “At the time, if you wanted art for your home, your options were either very expensive limited editions in galleries or old movie posters from Downtown. There was nothing in between,” El Sharkawy explains.
Cairo Prints began as a showcase for just 15 of Hefnawy and El Sharkawy’s artist friends, who had the idea of creating unlimited editions of posters to keep prices accessible to a wider audience. Since then, the exhibition has grown massively with over 670 artists and a collection of more than 3k prints at the annual open call, and has become a barometer of sorts for the state of graphic design and visual trends in Egypt.
Cairopolitan’s activities go beyond their own real estate. Earlier this year, they held an impressive exhibition at Cinema Radio in partnership with Al Esmaelia Real Estate, honoring the life of Um Kalthoum and the making of her recent biopic, El Sett. The exhibit included archival photography and featured the work of 80 different artists who were invited to reimagine the iconic Um Kalthoum through their own creative lens. Cairopolitan also created a special product line that included tote bags, T-shirts, and their signature miniature memorabilia that were used as promotional materials for the film.
Beyond Cairo: Today, Cairopolitan is looking to scale their business of “City Branding” into additional urban identities like Giza and Alexandria. The first of these arrives in the form of Gizapolitan, a line of Giza-inspired products and posters available at the GEM Gift Shop and now at a second physical location at the Pyramids Plateau. “Gizapolitan is still in the soft opening phase, but we should be officially launching soon,” says El Sharkawy. “We're just fine-tuning some of the products and packaging.”
EXCLUSIVE- Cairopolitan has also officially signed an agreement to open a branch at the 112-acre Giza Zoo when it reopens later this year. The new location will feature an exclusive line of products centered on the history and culture of the zoo.
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