HAUS was born from a desire to return to what we personally value most about creating — honesty, artistic depth, meaningful connection, and individuality.
It's a place to step away from the noise for a moment. To reconnect with your own voice and the reason you fell in love with creating in the first place. No hierarchy. No pressure to perform. Just real conversations, shared experiences, and space to exist as we are.
[ What's Included ]
8 Wholehearted Keynote Presentations
Deep Conversations
Connection Spaces
Dutch Treats
Traditional Pub Experience
Intimate Networking
HAUS Hang-Out Room
The HAUS Goodiebag
The Experience
[ Who It's For ]
You’re tired of performative networking
You crave deeper conversations
You want inspiration beyond trends
You miss creating from instinct
You believe individuality matters
You crave going back to the roots
You value intimate connections
You'll feel right at home if..
The Royal Theatre Tuschinski isn’t just the location of HAUS — it’s part of the experience itself. A place that feels less like a venue, and more like stepping inside a living piece of art.
Built in 1921, every corner carries character. The heavy velvet seats. The dramatic lighting. The layered architecture that feels cinematic before anything has even begun. It’s impossible to walk through it without feeling something.
Tuschinski holds the kind of atmosphere that reminds you why beauty matters. Not polished beauty. Not perfection. But beauty with soul, texture and history.
And maybe that’s why it felt so aligned with HAUS.
Because this was never meant to happen inside a sterile conference hall. It needed a place with presence. A place that already tells stories before we even arrive.
There’s something almost surreal about sitting inside a theatre like this, surrounded by creatives from all over the world, listening to honest conversations about art, storytelling and humanity. It slows you down. Makes you pay attention again.
Tuschinski doesn’t simply host HAUS. It becomes part of it.
The Location
Svenja and Dione didn’t create HAUS because they had all the answers. They created it because, at some point, they both started feeling the same thing: a quiet disconnect from what the industry was becoming.
An industry moving faster and faster toward perfection, performance and constant visibility — while so many creatives were silently craving something more human.
What brought them together wasn’t sameness, but shared values. And maybe most of all: a desire to create spaces where people don’t feel the need to become someone else in order to belong.
HAUS became an extension of those conversations.
Not built from trends, but from instinct. From late-night thoughts, creative frustrations, shared dreams, and the belief that there are still people in this industry searching for something real.
Together, Svenja and Dione bring two different perspectives into one shared vision — not as hosts standing above the experience. But as creatives walking through it alongside everyone else.