What stories do buildings contain that history fails to record? This question guided the research conducted by a group of Columbia University undergraduates as they crafted an online exhibition that uses film, photography, and writing to creatively tell the history of the neoclassical building that will soon host Columbia’s Global Center, located at Nikis 28 in the heart of Athens. Originally constructed as a house by former Prime Minister Alexandros Diomedes, it was given as a dowry when his sister Koula married General Leonidas Paraskevopoulos. The house was then sold to another prominent Athenian family, to whom it belongs to this day, and has since operated as a bar, a video club, a bookstore, and a yoga studio. While official records have no shortage of documentation on the men of the building, the women of Nikis 28 seem to have disappeared from that history. The exhibition centers on the lives of three women who lived in the building: Koula Diomedes, not just the wife of General Paraskevopoulos and recipient of his letters from the Turkish front, but a painter; Karasho Athena, a Russian cook who lived in the attic with her two husbands; and a bar owner only remembered as Ms. Betty.