How fascinating it must be to live on so much history. Although probably not the most comfortable house ever, not without major adaptations.
Small anecdote: A few years ago I had a chance to visit Perugia, Italy. Rented an Airbnb in the medieval city, and at first impression it wasn’t very good. A cramped small apartment in a medieval building. Even worse the only window looked straight at a wall.
Turns out it wasn’t just any wall. It was a 2500 years old Etruscan wall. Which was damaged by forces of Augustus in the Perusine War. Once you know what you’re looking at, traces of this event 2000 years ago were still quite visible on the wall. Mindblowing feeling.
Imagine being annoyed at someone who damaged some stonework 2,000 years ago because it inconveniences you occasionally.
It would be amusing in a way.
Sad to see it in such a desolate state.
Just wait until the next civilization builds on top of it.
Now we need to build a shitty prefab on top.
I’m interested in how each section was built
One on top of the other
thanks I never would have figured it out on my own. I’m not an architect you see.
Cool, wasn’t aware of this community, subscribed
Looks like some Tartaria conspiracy stuff.



