Polar's slim arms and round legs are the signature of the lineup: minimal, without looking sparse. At 67.25 inches wide and 35.5 inches tall, the Queen Loveseat sits in the mid-range of the Polar family. The 18-inch seat height is a touch taller than many sleeper sofas, and the 23.25-inch seat depth is on the firm-sit side of generous. The overall silhouette reads as a contemporary two-seater.
The Level mechanism opens in one step, gas-spring assisted. You set the loose back cushions aside (light handling), lift the seat, and the bed extends out from the wall. One step. The gas spring controls the motion so the open isn't a dead-weight lift. Wall clearance required is 89.75 inches. There's no power operation; this is fully manual.
The bed is a queen, 60 by 80 inches. The mattress is a five-inch built-in cold-cured high-density foam pad, CertiPUR certified, rated Daily Sleeper. That's an engineered sleep surface for regular nightly use, not a hotel-rollaway approximation. Sixty inches of width means two adults have genuine room.
Frame is solid spruce with mortise-and-tenon joinery and birch plywood, FSC and PEFC certified. Made in Europe to order, four to six weeks. 100-plus upholstery options in fabric and leather.
Polar Queen Loveseat makes sense when you want a queen bed in a loveseat footprint with a one-step manual conversion. The closest comparison within the lineup is the Nico Queen Loveseat: same queen bed size, but Nico uses the Nest mechanism (two steps, the bed stores under the seat) and has a lower, track-arm silhouette. Choose Polar if you prefer the Level's gas-spring assist and the slim-arm profile; choose Nico if you want the nested storage and the lower visual line.