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The
San Clementean
Raad
Ghantous
World Citizen Finds San Clemente Home
by Don Kindred
There
is a story behind every door in San Clemente. We
have each found our way here through some complex path of choices
and
circumstances. We are bound by the fact that we came, we saw,
we loved it, and we stayed, but it is often that path that make
us unique...
Raad
Ghantous is an interior designer who has recently lent his time
and talents to help transform the Casa Romantica into a magnificent
Cultural Center here in San Clemente, but his journey began
half-way around the world. His life experience and travels have
given the articulate man a broad perspective of the global village.
Ghantous was born in Baghdad,
Iraq, his mother was half Lebanese, a Catholic. His father,
a Greek Orthodox Civil Engineer, had moved to Iraq from Haifa,
Palestine with his father.
“My Grandfather had moved
the family to Iraq because the schools were there. When my father
grew up he moved us later to Abu Dahbi where he worked to build
airports and infrastructure.”
“There wasn’t much
there then,” Raad says, “they would slick the dirt
with oil to make it look like a road, we lived in a construction
camp where the entertainment was movies reflected on the outside
of the commissary every Friday, and the cooks would make indian
curry and we sat outside and watched the movie.”
In 1970, the Ghantous family moved
back to Kuwait where Raad attended a British system high school.
When it came time for college, he was prevented from attending
his father’s alma matter, which was the American University
in Beruit, because of the war in Lebanon, so he went to the
American College of Switzerland in Leysin and earned an undergraduate
degree in economics.
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The
Ghantous’ home in San Clemente is filled with treasures
from around the world. |
Then
he came to America...
His younger sister was moving
to California in 1985 to attend college at Claremont-McKenna.
Raad decided to come along and attend the gradate school at
Claremont to work on his MBA.
Finding himself undecided on a
career, he took a job with a friend of his father’s in
the construction industry. The experience uncovered a talent
for the design aspect of construction, so, when the industry
went soft in the early ‘90s He decided to take a class
in interior design. “The next thing I new it was three
years later and I have another undergraduate degree in interior
design,” he recalls.
His career took a leap when he
landed a job for the number one design firm in the world for
five-star hotels and resorts, the legendary, Whimberly Allison,
Tong & Go, (WAT&G) who’s impressive list of clients
includes everyone from the Royal Hawaiian in Waikiki to the
Ritz Carlton in Laguna Niguel.
“I’ve also worked
for Hirsch-Bedner and Design 1, where I was involved in other
hospitality, residential, retail, commercial and even yacht
projects. I couldn’t have planned to have better training
that would have given me the exposure and expertise to logistically
formulate a large plan of action, for the scheduling that goes
beyond,‘what fabric we’re going to put on the sofa?’”
“On one project I spent
three months on the island of Mauritius, in the Indian Ocean,
executing a five star hotel. The experience was invaluable.”
Raad’s past project experience
includes design and consultation services for a 35,000 sq.ft.
mansion in Beverly Hills, interiors of hotels, spas and even
the occasional yacht. The locations of these projects have taken
him to such exotic destinations as Spain, Japan, China, Taipei,
Bermuda, Cabo San Lucas and the United Arab Emirates
After 10 years in the business,
Raad, decided it was time to put his own name on the letterhead.
He formed Raad Ghantous & Associates in order to pursue
a wider variety of clientele and be more involved in his adopted
community. The move, he says has been worth it. Now he is augmenting
his design services with a line of designer accessories imported
from Morroco and Egypt (www.raadg.com, for the curious).
“The fact is that any business
is demanding,” he admits, “but I still wake up 9
out of 10 days loving what I do, and I look forward to the challenges.
I have the opportunity to live in beautiful San Clemente, to
be involved with the city, and still be able to travel. I currently
have projects working in Atlanta, New York City and Vail, CO.
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Raad’s
work is featured at the Casa Romantica. |
Ghantous’
creative philosophy is simple...“You don’t design
interiors, you design experiences. Sometimes they need to be
elaborate and theatrical and sometimes they can be subtle and
calming.”
But he doesn’t embrace any
particular style, “I believe if I’m doing my job,
the project shouldn’t look like me, but provide a beautiful
reflection of the client or the project itself.”
In the relative short time, five
years, of living in San Clemente, Raad’s local involvement
goes beyond his role as interior designer of the Casa Romantica.
He has recently taken an interest in the Downtown Business Association,
where he serves on the Design Committee and the San Clemente
Historical Society, where he serves on the Board of Directors
and represents them at city Design Review and Planning Committees.
How does he find life in San Clemente
compared to other parts of the world?
“What, with traveling and/or
living in many corners of the earth, I used to feel like I really
didn’t belong any particular place, I didn’t feel
out of place mind you, just not fully rooted anywhere, I was
a citizen of the world.
“Having said that though,
San Clemente has become my home. The weather here is nothing
short of amazing, sunny, and the people I have met have been
warmer still. The growing sense of community has been a wonder
to watch, and rewarding to be a part of. I may be a citizen
of the world, but San Clemente is definitely home.”
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Raad,
as a baby, with his father and grandfather celebrating
Easter in his native Iraq. |
And
as a Western cowboy in the
Middle East. |
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Coming to America...
For Raad Ghantos, the United States wasn’t much
of a culture shock. “We knew a lot about America.
I had an uncle who had been in Chicago since 1965. I had
studied the language in school. I had also spent time
in England, since nobody vacations in Kuwait in the summer
because of the heat, we were fortunate enough to be able
to go to London or Chicago.”
He shared a few first impressions. “When I first
came here, I found that most people, although they were
intellectually smart, were not as informed about other
countries. We know more now because of the war in Iraq,
but I remember someone once asked me if we really lived
in tents in the middle east I told them no we lived in
villas ... with two-camel garages,” he laughs.
“In Europe and the Middle East, because of the size
of the countries and the impact of outside countries,
you seem to stay more informed, because you read and you
see and basically you need to know what’s going
on around you.
“People in Claremont didn’t know what’s
going on in Upland, and I understand, why do they want
to? Why do they need to? In other parts of the world,
the desire to be a part of a bigger picture is somewhat
out of necessity, but it is also very much a part of the
culture.
“Of course the society is different here. Our heritage
is different. In this country 200 years ago the population
was all on the East coast, if we didn’t have the
independent,‘Go West Young Man’ mentality,
the country would be half empty.
“I also find things go at a slower pace in other
countries. I’ve been on trips to Greece and other
countries where it would be more normal to go home for
lunch than to eat at your desk. They don’t have
as much, in most cases, but there is less of a drive to
have every new thing.”
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