Sex on premises venue

Sex on Premises Venue (SOPV) is the term used, primarily in British and Australian medical literature, for the various commercial venues, as opposed to public spaces and parks, which provide for men who have sex with men (MSM) to meet and have sexual relations with each other on site.

A similar term, "on-premises club", is used by heterosexual swingers to describe a sex club in which non-commercial sexual activity takes place between clients or members.

While the term is primarily used with respect to MSM, at least one piece of legislation (the Sex Work Act in Victoria, Australia) uses "sex on premises venue" to mean "any venue where a person is required to pay an admission fee or charge to enter the venue for the purpose of engaging in sexual activities with another person who has also entered the venue on the same terms and who did not receive any form of payment or reward, whether directly or indirectly, for engaging in sexual activities".[1] This wording, while gender-neutral, would explicitly exclude brothels.

MSM sex-on-premises venues

MSM SOPV's include gay bathhouses, "backrooms", and "club" style venues that have no spa or sauna.[2] Most gay bathhouses, bookstores, and bars in the United States do not openly advertise their actual sex-on-premises purpose or activity, as SOPVs elsewhere can.

"Backrooms" consisting of small cubicles with expensive-to-view video machines are usually attached to an adult bookstore. Sometimes there are glory holes between the cubicles. The cubicles are also referred to as private viewing rooms or cruise lounges. "Backrooms" of pubs or bars are usually darkened rooms with or without continuous (and free) pornographic films, but without any dividers or privacy, encouraging group sex.

Club style SOPVs are an entire venue of themselves and again often consists of small cubicles, sometimes with no bed or mattress unlike gay bathhouses which usually have some kind of mattress in individual rooms.

Some bathhouses sell alcohol; pubs and bars sell alcohol but are not allowed to market themselves as SOPVs. Sometimes special events are held at pubs or bars that include sexual activity.

SOPVs are recognized by some city planners as part of the management strategy for sexually transmitted disease education and part of catering for a city's cultural diversity and tourist industry.[3][4][5]

Etiquette

Bookstore-backroom SOPVs may be free to enter, costing only for the film or video, or may have an admission charge.

Club style SOPVs may have regular themes such as underwear, boots only,[6] fisting or piss nights.[7]

See also

References

  1. SEX WORK ACT 1994 - SECT 3B, Exemptions for sex on premises venues, Queen's Printer, Victoria, Australia 1994
  2. QX Magazine London, QX (759): 50, 24 September 2009 https://web.archive.org/web/20090927044345/http://viewer.zmags.com/showmag.php?mid=rqrdts, archived from the original on 27 September 2009, retrieved 2009-10-25 Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. Prior, Jason (2008), "Planning for Sex in the City: urban governance, planning and the placement of sex industry premises in inner Sydney", Australian Geographer, Taylor & Francis, 39 (3): 339–352, doi:10.1080/00049180802270531, ISSN 0004-9182, OCLC 360672708
  4. Mullens A.B; Debattista, J; Staunton, S; Hamernik, E (2009), "Sex on premises venue (SOPV) health promotion project in response to sustained increases in HIV notifications", Sexual Health, n1 (2009 03 11), 6: 41–44, doi:10.1071/sh07087, ISSN 1448-5028, OCLC 423544035
  5. Waitt, Gordon; Markwell, Kevin (2006), Gay tourism: culture and context, Routledge, p. 114, ISBN 978-0-7890-1603-4
  6. The Fort, London, example of Boots Only nights.
  7. Central Station (archive), London, SOP piss night example.

External links

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