This week, Philips Sonicare reimagined one of the most routine parts of the day (and night) by turning it into something immersive, sensory, and unexpectedly cinematic. In celebration of World Oral Health Day, the brand introduced The Night Switch at Lavan Midtown, a one-night installation designed to shift how we understand what happens in the mouth after we sleep. What is usually reduced to a quick, habitual to-do before bed was expanded into a sequence of environments that invited you to slow down, move through, and physically register what is typically invisible through a guided immersive experience.
Guests entered in small groups, guided by Dr. Sharon Huang, who framed the experience with a clear and grounded premise: even with consistent brushing, manual techniques can leave behind up to 50 percent of plaque, a bacterial film that continues to develop overnight along the teeth and gumline. To help visualize the how bacteria grows uninterrupted through sleep, the installation translated it into something spatial and tangible, allowing that unseen process to unfold across a series of rooms.
The first environment established this immediately by immersing guests in a low-lit, blue-toned landscape that felt less like a gallery and more like stepping inside a living system. The floor was uneven and organic in texture, with embedded light sources glowing beneath the surface like pockets of activity. These illuminated areas responded, sending soft pulses outward that mimicked the spread of bacterial growth. It created the uncanny sensation of being inside the mouth itself, moving across a terrain that is constantly active, constantly shifting, even when it appears still.
As the group moved forward, that sense of unseen accumulation was translated into a more personal register through an interactive mirrored surface. As you moved your hands, abstract forms began to appear and build across your image, suggesting the gradual layering of plaque over time. It was subtle but effective, turning your own reflection into a kind of living diagram, where the boundary between body and projection blurred just enough to make the experience feel immediate.
Then in contrast, the experience transitioned into a more tactile exploration of brushing itself. A large-scale installation composed of oversized bristles occupied the next space, inviting guests to move closer and engage physically. Running your hands through the dense clusters of bristles made the act of brushing suddenly legible through touch. You could feel the resistance, the softness, the slight friction, translating an everyday motion into something sensory and deliberate. The environment continued to open into a softer, more atmospheric space that centered on the sensation of cleanliness. Projected visuals wrapped the room, with fluid, aqueous imagery moving slowly across the walls, while light and sound softened. Where the earlier rooms emphasized buildup and activity, this final immersive environment focused on clarity and release, creating a contrast that could be felt physically as much as it was seen.
Following the guided experience, guests were also able to learn more through a grounded and educational setting, where Dr. Sarah Ballaster led a series of demonstrations that connected what had just been experienced to the underlying technology. Using a transparent model of a Sonicare toothbrush, she showed how the device operates internally, emphasizing not just the speed of up to 62,000 bristle movements per minute, but the way those movements generate fluid action. This motion pushes fluid between teeth and along the gumline, extending the clean beyond what direct contact alone can achieve.
The distinction between manual brushing and sonic cleaning became easier to understand in this context, supported by measurable results that point to significantly greater plaque removal, particularly in areas that are difficult to reach. To further motivate better brushing, guests were able to select and personalize their own Sonicare toothbrushes. Names were engraved onto the handles, and travel cases were monogrammed on site.
The Night Switch experience showed many of us what we usually ignore, making the quiet buildup that happens overnight feel immediate and real. It leaves a lingering sense that this small, habitual act deserves more care than we give it. It’s not just about brushing better, but about recognizing oral health is tied to your overall well-being and something tied to how you feel, how you present yourself, and how you move through your day.