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What we are lacking is any proof of construction. We can speculate saying that this picture looks more like construction vs. demolition. In all of the possible "construction" pictures we have, everything looks very old.Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2018-07-08 20:53:40
Reaction Score: 7
- no site preparation photos
- no pictures of the site at 1/4, 1/2, 3/4 stage of completion
- no construction tools visible (unless you count those wheelbarrows)
- no transportation present
Where is any evidence of construction? What equipment was used to bring those granite looking pillars to the site?
What cranes were used to elevate those statues? Where are the scaffolding images?
Then we have this Temple of Music building with a pretty large open space inside. Allegedly constructed of wood.
The Temple's auditorium was capable of seating 2,200 people, and contained one of the largest pipe organs ever built in the United States.
And these musical organs are designed, and built to a specific building they are going to be in. You can not just stick one into a building and expect it to work.
Here is an unrelated pipe organ story: Pipe organ at Village Presbyterian Church is finding its voice.
And this 1901 Buffalo Pan-Am pipe organ could be problematic to explain, for hardly any of us have an idea, what it takes to build a pipe organ: The 101 of organ building. 1901 expo had one of the biggest one ever built in the US.It took the company’s 11 workers two years — expending about 35,000 work hours — to build the pipe organ. And although the organ has been in use since Nov. 20, it is still not a finished product.
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Too many things do not add up. And every other expo has similar problems.
Every single Exposition, or Exhibition to ever take place before like 1920 was demolished.





