It was built as a bizarre memorial to Albania's paranoid communist dictator who cut the country off from the rest of the world.
Now a brutalist pyramid in the heart of Tirana hopes to become a beacon of the Balkan country's transformation.
The behemoth fit for a pharaoh was designed by Enver Hoxha's daughter as a museum to his memory just a few years after his death in 1985.
Inside the grey pyramid sat a huge gleaming statue of the "Great Teacher", who ruled the hermetically sealed country for four decades.
Now it is being turned into a hub to boost the country's embryonic tech sector.
"What used to serve to glorify an individual has been completely overturned, it's becoming a place designed to educate people, not dedicated to one person but to thousands," said Martin Mata, co-president of the Albanian-American Development Foundation (AADF), one of the project's major stakeholders.
The 15-million-euro project co-financed by the AADF and Albanian authorities will house an education centre to train youngsters in all things digital in an after-school programme that aims to attract 4,000 students a week.
- 'Money well spent' -
The building has had several lives since the fall of communism and become a marker of the fast-changing nation, serving as a nightclub, NATO offices and a television studio.
But its newest iteration may prove to be its most important, its backers hope, with Albania losing thousands of young people every year who leave to find work abroad.
"It's money well spent," Mata said. "If 10 years from now we see that 200,000 kids have participated -- and if 30 percent of those kids chose a career path because of what they learned... then mission accomplished."
The pyramid's once-dilapidated interior has been reimagined by Dutch and Albanian architects, with massive windows channelling natural light over colourful office blocks.
"Our ambition was to open it up to the public, to make it the people's pyramid both inside and out," said architect Gent Agolli.
- 'A mirror' -
"All the knowledge acquired here will be useful to them now, but above all in the future, whatever profession they pursue," Tumo Tirana director Shqipe Berisha, 41, told AFP.
In September, the teenagers, mentors and professional trainers will pick up sticks and transfer their operations to the pyramid.
The 12,000-square-metre structure will also house an array of businesses, bars and cafes. The rents will be used to subsidise Tumo Tirana, making the courses as accessible as possible to Albanian students.
"To me the pyramid is like a mirror of what Albania has been like over the years," she said.
For "our parents (it was used to) try to explain the regime. In my time we used to slide down the pyramid's [exterior], after that it was in bits and pieces just as the country was in bits and pieces. Now it is open. It reflects the openness of the country."
Tumo student Amina Xhembulla, 15, has taken an interest in graphic design since enrolling, with pupils encouraged to create a portfolio showing off their work for universities or potential employers in the future.
Asked for her opinion on the pyramid's dark past, the teenager shrugged.
"I don't know much about history."
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© Agence France-Presse
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