About Us
Despite Stuttgart's broad cultural offering, there is still a lack of spaces for concerts, club culture, and events that are as non-commercial, political, and inclusive as possible. The non-profit association Sunny High e.V. addresses this gap with the Sunny High music club.
We want to be a venue where discrimination, violence, and oppression have no place. To put this into practice, we established a code of conduct and an awareness team at Sunny High, guided by anti-discrimination sensitivity and inclusion.
Sunny High is also meant to be a space for a diverse music and arts program, primarily shaped by individuals and collectives that are often less visible in Stuttgart's current nightlife, including FLINTA* and queer people, people affected by racism, people with disabilities, and people facing other forms of social exclusion.
We do not support individuals, collectives, or art forms that target marginalized people or promote discrimination.
Artists also carry responsibility for what they wear and perform in our spaces. Sexist, queer-hostile, racist, or otherwise discriminatory lyrics and acts centered on violent fantasies or devaluation have no place with us.
Fun and artistic value are more important to us than commercial success. We explicitly want to offer a stage to newcomers, experimental art, and performance. We love DIY as well as high-class established sound, and everything in between.
Our booking, like everything at Sunny High, is an ongoing process. We are open to critique and grateful for feedback. We expect the same openness from everyone performing at Sunny High.
Resources
Counseling for sexualized violence:
Counseling for health topics:
Counseling for addiction and substance use:
Safer way home:
External Cooperation
Partner collectives may integrate their own awareness concepts and teams into their events. Their code of conduct can differ from Sunny High's (for example, shirtless dress code), but it must always respect the agency of affected people and never tolerate discriminatory or abusive behavior.
During pre-event talks and agreements, partners are informed about contacting the Sunny High awareness team to discuss cooperation and concept compatibility. This should happen at least two weeks before the event so there is enough time for productive exchange.
Ideally, external teams work in a complementary structure with our own team. If an external team works alone, the following points are essential:

Code of Conduct
Any discriminatory, abusive, or inappropriate behavior such as sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia, ableism, classism, antisemitism, or anti-Muslim discrimination will not be tolerated.
Close dancing, touching, hugging, kissing, and more: talk to the other person about what feels okay and where their boundaries are. Silence is not consent. Being unable to respond is not consent.
If you notice someone feeling physically or emotionally unwell, or if you witness inappropriate behavior, report it directly to the Awareness Team (purple vests) or Sunny High staff.
We do not control our guests' drug consumption, so please take responsibility for yourself and make sure others are not affected or disturbed. Drink enough water, use our chill-out areas, and ask the bar for snacks or earplugs if needed.
As long as not everyone can equally choose to take off their shirt, we ask all guests to keep their upper body covered.
Everyone should feel free and comfortable at our event. Please respect that people may not want to appear in photos or videos online afterward.
As many different events take place here, we keep the venue as neutral as possible. Tags are welcome, but only in the area behind the golden archway.
A person's appearance does not tell you who they are. Do not make assumptions about identity, life experience, gender, sexuality, physical or mental abilities, age, religion, ethnicity, or social background.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO REMOVE ANYONE WHO DOES NOT FOLLOW THESE RULES FROM THE EVENT
* Thanks to the awareness team of Mensch Meier in Berlin, With Pleasure e.V., and Yvonne Wolz, whose concepts, experience, and input helped us develop our own awareness concept. We also thank VillaWuller e.V. in Trier, Villa Nachttanz e.V. in Heidelberg, and Club Alpha 60 e.V. in Schwäbisch Hall for inspiration.