We stayed up the hill in an apartment for 4 nights.
We choose it mostly because it had a washing machine and dryer but
as it turned out, there was a laundrette 7 minutes walk away.
3 flights of stairs, pretty ugly building, but inside was fine with A/C.

A cable car ran up from Ride Park to a castle (was closed for renovations).
Need to buy a Tbilisi transport card for 2 Gel, then the cable car was 5 Gel return.
The card can also be used for buses if you load more credit on the card.

Access from the top to the Botancial Garden and the Mother of Georgia Statue.
The best view of the front of the statue though is actually from the bottom.

Dry Bridge markets, open daily, were bric-a-brac on steroids.
Daggers to teacups and art.

As with many European cities, crossing the road on foot in Tbilisi is a risky move.
Pedestrian crossings are merely for show, cars don’t ever stop.
Some cars screech to a halt if you cross in-front of them but don’t bank on it.
Tbilisi has installed some crossings running under the busiest roads.

3 million people call Georgia home and 1 million of them live in Tbilisi.