EventStripe

Enterprise-grade event ticketing platform with modular architecture and high-availability design

EventStripe Platform

The client needed a system that could process real-time purchases, manage dynamic pricing, and remain stable under unpredictable load peaks — typical for major ticket launches.

Challenge

Unlike traditional event websites, EventStripe had to support instant booking, payment orchestration, and fraud monitoring simultaneously — with a high-availability architecture designed to minimize downtime. Additionally, the platform required detailed observability to detect issues in milliseconds.

Our Approach

We built a microservice-based architecture that separates ticket management, payments, analytics, and user notifications into independent services. The system was deployed in a Kubernetes cluster to enable horizontal scaling during high-load events. Monitoring was handled by ELK stack and Grafana, providing full real-time visibility into performance metrics.

EventStripe Architecture

CI/CD pipelines (via Jenkins) ensured continuous delivery without service interruptions.

Results

  • Stable operation during high volumes of simultaneous sessions
  • Low-latency response times under peak load
  • Fully automated scaling and rollback system
  • Continuous monitoring and anomaly detection integrated directly into Slack
EventStripe Results & Performance

Technical Stack

Backend: Java 20 · Spring

Frontend: Next.js

Infrastructure: Docker · Kubernetes

Monitoring: ELK · Grafana

Duration: 12 months

Team: 3 engineers

Why it Matters

This project validated our ability to build enterprise-grade SaaS architectures with modular architecture and high-availability design that remain lightweight and maintainable. The same modular design principles now serve as the foundation for H-Studio's startup infrastructure builds — fast to deploy, easy to scale, and engineered for resilience and operational stability.

Performance characteristics depend on traffic patterns, configuration, and operational conditions.

Case Studies