🏛️ How to Spot a Suspect Building History
Clues your city wasn’t built the way they said.
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⏳ Suspicious Timeline & Vanishing Records
Buildings claimed to be completed “start to finish” in just 2–4 years between 1870–1930—often during economic hardship.
No evidence of excavation, foundation pouring, or material deliveries
Only late-stage images with scaffolding—likely just re-facing
Rarely any construction photos, just grand “completion” images
Often labeled as “renovated” or “repurposed,” not newly designed
> 📚 Ask: How do we have archives of outhouses and farm sheds but no build logs for a 300,000 sq ft stone temple?
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🧬 Mismatch of Scale & Style
These structures dwarf all neighboring buildings supposedly built the same year. They’re ornate to a degree that even modern crews would struggle to match:
Grand staircases, vaulted atriums, massive stone blocks
Styles borrowed from ancient Greece, Rome, and Egypt
Seamless stonework, symmetry, and ornamentation that suggests template-driven precision, not one-off construction
> 🧠 Ask: Could men with mules and hammers haul 80-ton granite slabs across states with no power tools or CAD?
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🧩 Weird Ground-Level Evidence
Look closely at the street level:
“Basement” windows half-buried in sidewalk?
Entrances partially submerged or offset from modern grade?
Sloped terrain beside the building with windows oddly angled into the ground, especially on government hillsides
These signs hint that street level was raised—or that the building pre-dates the terrain shift.
> 🚪 Ask: Why would the most intricate buildings start underground unless they were already there?
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🖼️ Bonus Red Flags
🔁 Frequent resets: Fires, floods, or “remodeling” within decades of completion
🏛️ Labeled as Federal, Supreme, Masonic, or tied to sudden wealth booms
🌐 Sits on ley lines, former native land, or energy grid nodes
🔍 Claims of “unknown architect” or “origin lost to history”
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⚡ Quick Example: Ohio Supreme Court Building
Completed “start to finish” in just 3 years (1930–1933) during the Great Depression
Zero photos of foundation or material logistics
Multiple greek mosaics, geometric designs, vaulted hand painted ceilings
Massive scale, celestial motifs, eagle crests, and Greco-Roman halls
“Repurposed” decades later—originally just called a Departments Building
> Conclusion: It wasn’t built—it was found and refaced.
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🏛️ How to Spot a Suspect Building History
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