03/03/2026
Layers of survival, stacked in concrete.
This building is a quiet archive of Georgia’s socialist housing legacy — standardized blocks designed for equality, efficiency, and mass living. But what was once uniform has transformed into something deeply personal.
After the collapse of the Soviet system, scarcity met necessity. And necessity met imagination.
Balcony by balcony, room by room, residents extended their homes outward — enclosing terraces, adding steel frames, improvising with brick, wood, tin, and glass. These additions weren’t part of the original plan. They were acts of adaptation. Of resilience. Of claiming space in a system that no longer provided.
What began as rigid socialist architecture has evolved into a vertical patchwork of individual stories — each extension a response to need, climate, family growth, or economic survival.
This is architecture beyond the walls.
Not designed by architects, but by life itself.