Imagine a (flat) 4D space where we measure time outwards in a radial direction from the origin.
So that 3D space at a given time would consist of a spherical shell. (As such this would be a closed Universe.)
In a far distant time the spherical shells at any given position would be essentially flat and the shells so big as to make the Universe appear infinite.
Light rays would have to only cross the spherical shells at 45 degree angles. Hence we could impose a partially ordered set on the events. And the lightcones at every point in this 4D space would be well defined.
In a sense this 4D space-time would have no boundary, but in another sense we have defined the origin as a special point at which time "begins". Light rays would kind of spiral out from the origin.
Is the space-time as I've described it a solution of GR? Is there anything special about it - to me it seems like the second most obvious way to imposee a partial order to the set of events into a space that is not simple Minkowski space.
Is this a solution of GR? In which case what would the metric be?