Air pollution in Tbilisi

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I'm considering buying an apartment in a project called Park Home, situated between Zurab Avalishvili Street and Chabua Amirejibi Highway, but I've never visited the area. Is there a lot of traffic in that area? Is the area liveable in general?
I can also see on Google Maps that there are developments up in the hills above the city (Tbilisi Hills), is that an area worth checking out?
Good looking bird, I've been enjoying learning about the different birds that live in the woods nearby. I'm not familiar with that project but I'll find out for you. Up in the hills about the city describes much of the newer construction, the views are better but there are many things to consider besides the obvious construction quality. For me one of the biggies is traffic. Often there is only one access road to the location and this can turn into a parking lot at any time but especially in the evening. I would not want to own one of the new places being built up the street from where I live for this reason. The man who owns the big beautiful apartment on the floor below me wants to sell it because he has so much trouble finding parking. They built this building and 2 others next to it - with NO parking garage. This is one of the odd things about apartments in Georgia; the units do not normally come automatically with parking spots = you have to buy them separately! Maybe you've encountered this before but it's new, and frankly crazy, to me. And typically, I'm told, Georgians do not buy the parking spots. They'd rather save money and park on the street, which has created a parking nightmare. So, something to be aware of. Feel free to add me as a contact and I will get back to you soon, David
DavidB4 wrote:Often there is only one access road to the location and this can turn into a parking lot at any time but especially in the evening. I would not want to own one of the new places being built up the street from where I live for this reason.
How about Tbilisi Hills Golf & Residences? The compound can be accessed by two roads: one from the Tbilisi Krtsanisi District, and the other on the Rustavi highway. Do you know if these roads are traffic-jammed too?
DavidB4 wrote:This is one of the odd things about apartments in Georgia; the units do not normally come automatically with parking spots = you have to buy them separately! Maybe you've encountered this before but it's new, and frankly crazy, to me.
This is quite common in Oslo, where I'm from. Here it actually makes some sense since many city dwellers don't own a car nowadays, including me, and it's usually not allowed to park on the street in densely populated areas.
/fr/expat-mag/3383 … ollue.html
What measuring instrument did you use ?
What is his confidence interval ?
When was it calibrated ?
How many measurements have you taken ?
From which particles : PM10 ? PM2.5 ? PM0.1 ?
Where ?
When ?
Thank you.
Michel
Either you have used one of these technologies and you have discovered that the air quality is good everywhere and permanently in Georgia, or you trust a natural or legal person who has told you that the quality of the air is good everywhere and permanently in Georgia.
"Having two languages (realism and nominalism), the sophist knows how to overcome facts by words and words by facts."
Arnaud-Aaron Upinsky, doctor of philosophy, mathematician, epistemologist and linguist.
"You have to destroy the gravity of your opponents with irony and their irony with gravity."
Gorgias
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