Many.
Different societies down the ages have used or adapted suitable (natural) caves for such purposes as home, food stores, chapels, etc. The huge entrance to Peak Cavern, in the English Midlands, once housed rope-walks. Abandoned sea-caves formed at a time of higher sea-level in a chalk cliff on the Garonne Estuary (W. France) were used as homes from Neolithic times to the early-20C.
Also many countries have artificial "caves" cut into suitable rock-faces for similar human purposes. E.g. Ajanta (India) - former monastery.
Usually in caves and ominous buildings
In trees and in caves and under buildings
There were long waiting periods for decent accomodations in the local caves.
No. It is a place in New Zealand with caves, but it is not a country.
No. The only inhabitants of Australia were the nomadic Aborigines, who had no need of buildings. Their only shelter was bark "humpies", caves or cliff overhangs.
there is no country that does not have parallel lines on their buildings. this is proven.
anywhere except caves, houses, buildings, ruins, and islands
Quintana Roo, Mexico
typically dark places: old buildings, caves, and areas where there isn't a lot of people
Is it Japan or China
There are thousands of caves in the Philippines, with around 400 caves documented and explored so far. The limestone karst landscape of the country provides ideal conditions for cave formation and exploration.
Vampire bats live throughout Mexico, Central America, and South America. They will nest in caves, mines, tree hollows, abandoned buildings, and anywhere else that provides them with a dark shelter to hang out in.