Georgia's heritage,
one map.

Over 20,000 cultural monuments and natural sites across Georgia, with English summaries and a community of fellow travellers sharing tips, photos, and check-ins.

In active development — sign up below to hear when it launches.

What's inside

Every monument in the cadastre

Over 20,000 sites from the National Agency for Cultural Heritage Preservation of Georgia — from famous cathedrals down to overlooked village churches and Bronze Age cemeteries.

Natural sites too

National parks, managed reserves, canyons, caves, and natural monuments from the Agency of Protected Areas.

English summaries

Site descriptions drawn from cadastre records and edited for clarity, alongside the original Georgian text.

Find what's nearby

The Nearby tab shows what's around you with one-tap directions. Search lets you jump to a famous site or browse by region.

Heritage passport

Mark sites you've visited as you go. Build a personal record of every place you've stood in.

Photos and tips from travellers

Signed-in users can share photos and short comments. Everything reviewed before it appears publicly.

Sakdrisi /sɑkˈdɾisi/ · noun · Georgian

Named for Sakdrisi-Kachaghiani, the prehistoric gold mine destroyed in 2014. Its loss sparked Georgia's modern heritage protection movement, and this catalogue is built in that spirit.

Data sources

Special thanks to the National Agency for Cultural Heritage Preservation of Georgia for their years-long work photographing and describing more than 20,000 immovable monuments across the country. Thanks also to the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage, whose funding and support put that work online as an open data project. Sakdrisi would not be possible without both.

Get in touch

Press, partnerships, museums, NGOs, or just curious - email hello@sakdrisi.ge.