Tbilisi features a number of notable landmarks and tourist attractions. Georgia’s Parliament and government (State Chancellery) buildings, as well as the Supreme Court of Georgia, are all located in Tbilisi. The Georgian National Museum, Tbilisi State Conservatoire, Tbilisi Opera and Ballet Theatre, Shota Rustaveli State Academic Theatre, Marjanishvili State Academic Theatre, Sameba Cathedral, Vorontsov’s Palace (also known as the Children’s Palace today), many state museums, the National Public Library of the Parliament of Georgia, the National Bank of Georgia, Tbilisi Circus, The Bridge of Peace, and other important landmarks are located in the city. During the Soviet era, Tbilisi was consistently placed among the top four cities in the Soviet Union in terms of the number of museums.
The most important historic monuments in the city are the Narikala fortification (fourth–seventh centuries), Anchiskhati Basilica (sixth century, reconstructed in the sixteenth century), Sioni Cathedral (eighth century, subsequently rebuilt), and Church of Metekhi.
- Tourism Office, Freedom Square, Rustaveli Ave.3 (Metro Liberty Sq. exit – on the south side of Freedom Square—on the ground floor Georgia Museum of History). – upon arriving in Tbilisi. They provide a complimentary, highly thorough brochure with a map of the city but nothing more.
Tbilisi’s climate is humid subtropical, with warm to hot summers and freezing winters.
Tbilisi’s average yearly temperature is 12.7 °C (54.9 °F). The coldest month is January, with an average temperature of 0.9 °C (33.6 °F). The warmest month is July, with an average temperature of 24.4 °C (75.9 °F).
May and June get the most precipitation (averaging 84 mm (3.3 in) each), while January has the least (averaging 20 mm (0.8 in)). Snow falls 15–25 days per year on average. The surrounding mountains often trap clouds inside and around the city, particularly during the spring and autumn months, resulting in extended wet and/or overcast weather.
Tbilisi lies in the South Caucasus region, at 41° 43′ North Latitude and 44° 47′ East Longitude. The city is located on both sides of the Mt’k’vari River in Eastern Georgia. The city is 380–770 meters (1,250–2,530 feet) above sea level and is shaped like an amphitheatre surrounded by mountains on three sides. Tbilisi is limited to the north by the Saguramo Range, to the east and south-east by the Iori Plain, and to the south and west by numerous Trialeti Range ends (sub-ranges).
Tbilisi is the country’s economic capital, accounting for about half of Georgia’s GDP in 2014, with a GDP at base prices of 12,147 Million Georgian lari. The service sector, which includes government services, dominates and accounts for 88 percent of GDP. Its GDP per capita of 10,336 Georgian Lari is more than 50% more than the national average. The wholesale and retail trade sectors dominate the service sector, reflecting Tbilisi’s importance as a transit and logistical center for the nation and the South Caucasus. The manufacturing industry contributes just 12% of Tbilisi’s GDP but employs much more people and generates far more total value added than the manufacturing sectors in any other area of Georgia. Tbilisi has a substantially higher unemployment rate than the surrounding areas, at 22.5 percent.