Using All Six Stone House Spaces in One Seamless Event
One of the most powerful things about Stone House isn’t just that it’s historic or that the food is good. It’s that six distinct spaces live inside one stone shell—two bars, a dining room, a showroom, a cave, and a patio—giving you a built-in way to move guests through an experience, as detailed in the venue’s spaces overview.
Here’s how to use all of them (or most of them) in a single, coherent event.
Meet the Spaces
Based on Stone House’s spaces overview and how the venue is used for private and public events, here’s the quick cast:
Patio / Courtyard – Outdoor area for ceremonies, receptions, and open-air dinners.
Parlour Bar – Downstairs bar with craft cocktails and casual energy.
Lounge – Plush, semi-private room ideal for small receptions, VIP areas, or quiet zones.
Dining Room – Main hall for seated dinners and formal meals.
Showroom / Stage Room – Music-ready venue with professional light and sound, used for both private events and public programming.
Cave / Cavern – Stone “basement” space for micro-events, tastings, or intimate ceremonies.
This mix means you can host an event that feels like several different gatherings tied together by one address.
Example: Wedding Using Six Spaces
1. Getting Ready – Penthouse / Suite (if reserved)
Start the day upstairs in a private area, away from early arrivals and setup, as part of a private venue experience.
2. Ceremony – Patio
Tie the knot outdoors under the foothill sky, with the historic stone façade as a backdrop and an easy transition to the rest of the venue.
3. Cocktail Hour – Parlour & Patio
Move guests into the Parlour bar and back out onto the patio for cocktails and small plates. This creates flow while keeping energy high and movement natural.
4. Dinner – Dining Room
Bring everyone into the main hall for a seated or family-style meal featuring Stone House’s seasonal, organic, seed-oil-free menu—an approach often discussed in community conversations around the venue.
5. Dancing – Showroom
Transition into the Showroom for first dance, live band or DJ, and late-night celebration, taking advantage of the room’s dedicated production setup and its role in ongoing event programming.
6. After-Party or Nightcap – Cavern or Lounge
Finish the evening with a smaller circle downstairs in the Cavern or tucked into the Lounge—perfect for winding down with closest friends and family.
Example: Corporate Summit or Product Launch
Breakfast & registration: Patio or Parlour
Opening keynote: Showroom
Breakout sessions: Dining Room and Lounge
Lunch: Dining Room with buffet or plated service
Afternoon workshops: Cavern for intimate sessions; Showroom for larger groups
Evening reception: Whole-building mix—Patio, Parlour, Lounge, and Showroom open in different modes
Because the spaces are contiguous, your event feels expansive without becoming logistically chaotic.
Why Multi-Space Flow Matters
Using multiple rooms thoughtfully:
Keeps guests engaged as the environment shifts
Allows you to match the energy of each moment to the right setting
Gives people options—quiet corners, high-energy dance floors, and everything in between
It also allows your vendors—planner, DJ, caterer, AV—to design each chapter of the event with clear boundaries.
Tips for Pulling It Off Smoothly
Work with Stone House’s events team to map guest flow and timing between spaces.
Use clear signage and staff guidance so no one feels lost.
Coordinate with the kitchen and bar so food and drinks meet guests where they are.
Build a few shared anchor moments—ceremony, toast, performance—that bring everyone together.
Stone House
If you like the idea of your event unfolding like chapters in a book—courtyard vows, bar buzz, hall feast, showroom show, cavern nightcap—Stone House is designed for exactly that. The team can help you choose which spaces to use and how to orchestrate them so your guests feel guided, not herded.