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- Fine forging on Aboviani Street.

- The famous Gudiashvili Square.

- Artist’s corner.

- Breathtaking staircases and mezzanines on Akhospireli Street. You can rent it, by the way.

- Migrant workers.

- Another work by Ceramic Room studio.

- On guard, sir!

- Italian surrealist Vesod tells the dramatic story of Medea and Jason.

- The experimental Liberty Theatre and the hotel of the same name. The former is praised, the latter not so much.

- The neo-futuristic, contextual Paragraph hotel across the street is more popular.

- Drinking fountains in the spirit of Soviet urbanism with traditional motifs near street booksellers.

- Three eras without gaps: imperial neo-Gothic (ballet school), late socialist realism (bas-relief) and post-Soviet contemporary (bank).

- Flower market on Orbeliani Square.

- Old and new Tbilisi on adjacent balconies. Because they can.

- Trinity Cathedral from a respectful distance.

- Lilacs on Sundukiani Street. The trash bag is part of the composition, nothing to complain about.

- Chavchanidze’s house in the spirit of Tiflis Art Nouveau. There’s also an interior mural with Mihály Zichy’s illustrations for “The Knight”.

- Shabby Tiflis eclecticism with Art Nouveau elements and an ironic “Tomorrow” (which will never come) on the wall.

- A riot of private construction in the courtyard of the Emergency Service. The state with the people, so to speak.

- Tbilisi’s 19th-century gallery buildings have their charm, but quickly deteriorate and often fall into disrepair (it’s easier to demolish than to restore).

- Gosha’s restoration.

- Monumental late-Soviet decorative plastic art on the facade of a former department store (now a shopping mall) on Agmashenebeli Avenue.

- The 2008 war heroes’ monument is criticised for its hellish location in the middle of a traffic circle. I took the pic from a bus, there’s no other way.

- Kara-Murza was sentenced to 25 years in Russia for his anti-war stance, spent more than two years behind bars, released as part of a prisoner swap.

- The retro-futuristic Afisha hotel is designed to reflect the future as it was envisioned in the past.

- The Church of Mikhail of Tver is located directly beneath the cable car, which I recently wanted to take.

- The Mtatsminda-Rustaveli cable car station, in the spirit of
freaked out pseudo-historical eclecticism with oriental motifs.

- The sun is rapidly setting behind the horizon, blurring the colours, but you already know everything here.

- The lower station is discreetly hidden behind the Academy of Sciences. From the facade on Rustaveli Avenue, nothing is visible at all.

- Good night, Tbilisi.
