Tbilisi, Georgia

Communal Hotel Sololaki

Price per night from$74.21

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (GEL200.00), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Tbilisi on the eye

Setting

Storied Sololaki

The clue’s in the name at Communal Hotel Sololaki, a deftly overhauled 19th-century townhouse where cosy nooks, garden-view terraces and a huge pine dining table invite leisurely Georgian breakfasts, congenial conversation, and general hanging out. The hotel – an endearingly retro mish-mash of art nouveau, art deco and mid-century modern trappings – lies on an unassuming side-street in Old Tbilisi, surrounded by cafés, indie boutiques and multitudinous mediaeval monuments.

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Facilities

Photos Communal Hotel Sololaki facilities

Need to know

Rooms

13, of which three are suites.

Check–Out

Noon, and check-in is at 3pm. Both are flexible, subject to availability and a 50% charge (until 6pm or from 6am respectively).

More details

Rates exclude breakfast, but a buffet spread of local delicacies and made-to-order eggs is available for GEL30 (US$10).

Also

Steep townhouse stairs and no elevator mean that Communal Hotel Sololaki is unfortunately unsuitable if you have mobility issues and/or use a wheelchair.

At the hotel

Free WiFi throughout. In rooms: air-conditioning, smart TV with Netflix, Roberts radio, tea- and coffee-maker, minibar, free bottled water, hairdryer and locally made bath products.

Our favourite rooms

Drawing inspiration from the bohemian Sololaki neighbourhood and nearby botanical garden, the rooms and suites here all feature bright pops of colour and potted plants. The decadent Bathtub Suite adds (as the name may suggest) a free-standing clawfoot tub, accompanied by views of Mount Mtatsminda and the Tbilisi funicular. Mix yourself a large Negroni at the cocktail station and dive right in.

Packing tips

Nudity is the norm at the hot-spring bath houses in Tbilisi’s ancient Abanotubani district, but shrinking violets may wish to pack modesty-maintaining bath house briefs and bikinis for this authentic geothermal plunge. A Georgian phrasebook to help with ‘hello’, ‘thank you’ and ‘now, where did I leave my smalls?’ also wouldn’t go amiss.

Also

The Communal Hotel group has equally swish stays in Telavi and Kutaisi, if you’re considering exploring the wider country on a twin-centre trip.

Children

There are no specific facilities for Little Smiths at Communal Hotel Sololaki, where rooms have a maximum occupancy of two people.

Food and Drink

Photos Communal Hotel Sololaki food and drink

Top Table

Staff are on hand to hustle you tables at the best Old Tbilisi hotspots and restaurants-with-views.

Hotel restaurant

Breakfast is served around a large communal table, with buffet Georgian specialities, an à la carte menu of cooked-to-order hot dishes, and tea and coffee on tap. There’s no restaurant here but guests in search of modern Georgian or Levantine cuisine should make for Craft and Weller respectively, both at Smith-approved sister stay Communal Hotel Plekhanovi, just across the river.

Hotel bar

Retreat to the garden terrace with a Negroni from the trolley, and hit up knowledgeable staff for directions to Sololaki’s coolest new cocktail joints.

Room service

None, but you can have breakfast brought up to your room if you’re not a morning person.

Location

Photos Communal Hotel Sololaki location
Address
Communal Hotel Sololaki
6 Kojori Street
Tbilisi
0105
Georgia

A fragrant pot-pourri of 20th-century interior design, Communal Hotel Sololaki is set amid the historic townhouses and mediaeval monuments of Old Tbilisi, a short stroll from Mtatsminda Park, the botanical garden and the Narikala fortress.

Planes

Tbilisi International Airport lies east of the city centre, a 30- to 40-minute cab ride from the hotel. A one-way transfer costs around GEL70 (US$25).

Trains

Transfers from Tbilisi train station cost GEL20–30 (US$7–10) one-way. Or you can hop on the metro to Liberty Square, a kilometre from the hotel.

Automobiles

Tbilisi’s reliable bus and metro networks mean city sightseers have little need for their own set of wheels. Cars are available to rent at the airport should you plan a multi-centre trip to one of Communal’s other Smith-approved stays.

Worth getting out of bed for

Cameras at the ready: the cobbled lanes of Old Tbilisi are full of eye-popping architectural surprises, each distinct style marking a different chapter in Georgia’s storied past. Crooked mediaeval clock towers and ancient city walls rub shoulders with brutalist Soviet-era apartment blocks, vintage scooters prop up collapsing Italianate mansions, and the domes of the Abanotubani bath houses undulate like desert dunes in a Persian fairytale.

The baths – sulphurous underground thermal springs – are bucket-list material. Choose from public or private, authentic or upscale, and book an exfoliating kisi scrub while you’re there. The bath houses are overlooked by the imposing Narikala fortress, an ancient Persian citadel that’s best reached by cable car from Rike Park or via the rather more challenging (but no less scenic) old Betlemi Street Stairs from Sololaki. 

Even those with glutes of steel will likely opt to ride the funicular up to the Mount Mtatsminda viewpoint, for some of the best skyline views in town. Get higher still on Mtatsminda Amusement Park’s old-school Ferris wheel. Or, for something a little more down-to-earth, the National Botanical Garden of Georgia – all 161 hectares of it – lies in the nearby Tsavkisis-Tskali Gorge.

Local restaurants

Madre is a Communal Hotel Sololaki favourite, bringing modern Basque tapas and pintxos to the foothills of Mount Mtatsminda. Spanish Revival-style interiors –terracotta tones, gleaming tiles and exposed brick – set the scene for octopus carpaccio, truffle bread, steak empanadas and a biblical wine list that splits the difference between European and Georgian varieties. Nearby Pasanauri is all about hearty and authentic Georgian plates: veal chops, traditional khinkali dumplings, fried potatoes, apple cake (and a three-month diet for afters).

Local cafés

You’re never far from a speciality coffee bar in Sololaki. Retro-chic Kutkhe is a case in point, all exposed brick, Moorish floor tiles and a chandelier that hangs from artfully distressed cracked-plaster ceilings. Come for the coffee and brunch, stay for cocktails in the next room, which transforms into a lamplit speakeasy-style bar in the evening. Nearby Coffein is a cute little hole-in-the-wall takeaway for no-nonsense morning espresso and pastries

Local bars

There are a few good cocktail bars within stumbling distance of the hotel. Testing your detective skills, tiny 41° (or 41° Art of Drinks to give it its full, modest moniker) is worth the search thanks to a menu of craft cocktails made using traditional local ingredients like cherry and sour plum liqueurs and fermented Georgian yoghurt. Find it behind a steel door down a narrow passageway off Galaktion Tabidze Street… If it proves too elusive (or, more likely, has already reached its 20-person capacity), the Rum Roof Kitchen Bar and Kantora are easier-to-locate nearby alternatives.

Reviews

Photos Communal Hotel Sololaki reviews

Anonymous review

Every hotel featured is visited personally by members of our team, given the Smith seal of approval, and then anonymously reviewed. As soon as our reviewers have returned from this Georgia peach in Old Tbilisi and unpacked their stash of local wines and teas, a full account of their city sojourn will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust, here's a quick peek inside Communal Hotel Sololaki…

Communal Hotel Sololaki’s outsized front door is a vision in cerulean blue; a disarming portal that transports guests from the tourist-filled streets of Old Tbilisi to a hushed and homely haven, all garden hammocks, retro record players and forests of green foliage. Deep shades of blue, calming coral reds and Victorian style wood panelling add intimacy to this Sololaki townhouse’s many cosy corners and hidden nooks, where conviviality is encouraged via a wealth of communal spaces. Contemporary prints by Georgian artists adorn the walls, and a pink neon sign over the communal breakfast room declares ‘I fell in love’ (a reference, perhaps, to khachapuri, the ubiquitous and always delicious cheese-filled national bread that’s served here). It’s a genteel, one-of-a-kind aesthetic that owes as much to 20th-century vogues as it does to the timeworn streets of Tbilisi itself

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Price per night from $74.21