The first thing you see when you walk into Patrick McInerney's living room is that there's nothing to see. The walls are bare, and ditto for the ceiling. You try to switch on the lights, but there doesn't appear to be a switch. There's music playing, but where is it coming from? The lamp is obviously working -- the bulb is lighted, after all -- but it seems to be plugged into ... the plaster?
Part interior illusionist and part aesthetic anorexic, McInerney is a practicing member of the cult of disappearing design, the now-you-see-it, now-you-don't ethos that aims to secrete away anything that needs a button, a cord or a subwoofer to work. It's a passion that McInerney, a 44-year-old architect from San Diego, takes seriously, comparing his streamlining drive to the process of writing a novel.
"Each word is considered and refined, not only for the word's meaning but also its relationship to other words," he wrote in an e-mail. "And the landscape in which the words are brought together."
Indeed, more than simply stashing a stereo in a closet or throwing a shawl over the ottoman, the all-invisible aesthetic aims for a higher-minded goal: creating unified spaces that flow from room to room and place to place.
"We're interested in having our work reflect and melt into the environment," said Rene Gonzalez, a Miami architect who reflected and melted his vision into a client's $47 million home in Dade County. "We think about enclosures that can dissipate and disappear, so that the outside and inside bleed into each other."
Driven by technology and old-fashioned ingenuity, such design pursues goals as "zero sightlines" (fixtures that can't be seen in profile) as well as creating seamless -- and shadowless -- surfaces. Tricks are plentiful and often James Bond-ian: light switches are camouflaged to appear to be part of the wall while dining-room tables collapse to less than an inch wide.
One major proponent of the unseen look is the Trufig brand, which offers all manner of disguised designs, like power outlets and data jacks that blend into the background, and tablets and touch panels installed into walls. Trufig advertises itself as "a revolutionary design solution" that abides by a strict rule: "Be completely flush-mounted."
On a more practical, less superficial level, disappearing design is meant to both maximize one's ground plan (particularly in small urban apartments) and minimize the "visual noise" created by such things as bulky knobs, vents and the ancient albatross of many decorators: the wide-screen TV.