Inverted House

Inverted House is a minimalist single-family residence located in Tbilisi, Georgia designed by TIMM. Tbilisi’s hillside neighborhoods present a particular spatial paradox: prestige defined not by openness but by enclosure. In Okrokana, narrow streets and small plots are dominated by tall perimeter fences that carve private worlds from the urban fabric. Rather than treating this condition as a limitation, TIMM Architecture takes the fence itself as the primary architectural subject, asking what happens when the boundary becomes the building.

The response is a residential typology built on inversion. Instead of positioning a house behind a perimeter wall, the architecture assumes the role of that wall entirely. The building wraps the site on three sides, its mass receding slightly from the street to dissolve the hard boundary between public and private without sacrificing enclosure. Two gardens structure the experience – an outer garden mediating the street relationship, and an inner courtyard that functions as the true spatial core, an open-air room from which all primary living spaces take their orientation.

This sectional intelligence is where the project reveals its ambition. The volume rises to three floors at the rear while reading as a single story toward the street, a compression that allows for double-height living and a sequence of half-levels that unfold gradually as one moves inward. A suspended swimming pool bridges the courtyard void, creating a covered outdoor space beneath while visually linking the upper levels – an element that performs both structurally and experientially, anchoring the vertical composition with a single horizontal gesture.

Similar Posts