Hidden dish drying closet

Innovation often spreads like wildfire – it is a wonder, really, that this 50-year-old design idea has not fully dowsed the flames of frustration in kitchens around the world. Instead of dedicating surface or sink area to drying dishes, it makes shelves serve a secondary purpose and lets you skip a step entirely.

Hanging dish rack

Still found mainly in Northern Europe, the idea is simple: dishes are placed into a bottomless cupboard where each shelf drains down to the next level, and ultimately to waiting sinks and drains below. The effect? A marked decrease in the 30 thousand odd hours spent by Finnish housewives doing dishes daily (but don’t quote us on that statistic). This hidden dish draining closet eliminates a big chunk of the work.

Dish cabinet sideboard design

Plastic-coated steel wire, of the kind usually found in baskets sitting inside or alongside sinks, frames each shelving layer rather than an impermeable surface, though other variants exist as well (both covered and uncovered). This hidden dish drainer closet may be the most clever and overlooked solution for cramped kitchens where full-sized dishwasher appliances simply won’t fit, but it’s far from the only option.

Smart space saving dish racks

We are all familiar with drying mats, collapsible wood, plastic or metal dish racks and other solutions, but hanging dish racks exist on the shelves of stores like IKEA, though few allow the user to bypass the interstitial step of drying then putting away dishes.

Stainless steel dish drying shelf

Dish rack suspended over sink

Unlike many non-appliance amenities, this (loosely translated) ‘dish drying closet’ design and many subsequent variations can be traced back to a single inventor: Maiju Gebhard, who created it as part of the Finnish Association for Work Efficiency in the mid-1940s. Since then, though, it remains an elusive fixture in many modern kitchens outside its home continent. Making these kinds of space-saving dish racks more of a standard feature in compact kitchens would be a nice step toward universally user-friendly design.