That is very cool man.
I've been on this architecture history thing lately, regarding the narrative we're provided about the worldwide construction during the mid 1800's through early 1900's for massive stonework marvels.(Comprising some of the brick home mansions)
There's a lot of dedicated researchers out there looking at the history we have in the form of photographs, documents, and videos. The conclusions are a little unsettling when we come to realize that things like the Chicago World Fair 1893, boasting 690 acres of "temporary" construction for temporary use, pulled off by horse and buggy low population migrants trying to find their way, yet somehow had the ability to do all of this construction that we certainly cannot emulate today with much higher advancement in big machinery tech might not be true.
No credit to the artisans, only the businessmen geniuses who were "architects" and apparently didn't want to leave those amazing blueprints behind or credit the ridiculous numbers of skilled stone mason artisans it would have taken to pull off. The blueprints do not exist and neither do the names of the skilled masons. Only photos of horse and buggy people with rubble on the ground for their building supplies, not staged or organized in any fashion other than rubble, and lots of scaffolding photos around already built structures with vanilla sky white outs of the roof to make it look like active construction when the buildings were clearly already old in the photos.
It's super cool how Wikipedia maintains the historical records for us to analyze.
Maybe a slight digression here lol, but I just love this topic and find the idea fascinating that we (humans) in our current form, may not have built a lot of structures and underground tunnel networks that we claim to have built during our technological infancy.