This project follows my theoretical statement on Kaisariani, one of Athens’ satellite neighborhoods, which hosted refugees following the Smyrna catastrophe in 1922. Located near the city center and the university, it stands out for its rare social and volumetric diversity, born from the contrast between the small houses built during the refugee era with socially-oriented programs and typologies and the polykatoikia that emerged later. While these apartment blocks addressed the need for urban densification, they also gradually contributed to the erosion of a preexisting form of collectivity based on block permeability, shared roof terraces, communal gardens, the appropriation of courtyards, and the preservation of views over the Attican landscape. This project aims to preserve the site’s existing qualities and to revive a fading sense of community. Through a reorganization of the road network and the implementation of heritage regulations, it proposes a calm, mostly pedestrian circulation system, enabling greater freedom for interventions in public space. These new conditions support the introduction of collective programs designed to strengthen the neighborhood’s social dynamics. Among them: a theater, an open air cinema, an agora on the roofs of the polykatoikies, and a playful children’s park. These actions represent a reproducible model for the rest of the district, seeking to sustain what is at risk of disappearing. As lived spaces, they become scenes of shared life, where the ordinary regains its collective strength.