Well if you eat the chicken and it accualy is yes
The first French King was Louis XIV.
It has no toilets, it says on this web-site!
The Palace of Versailles, which was first utilized by Louis XIV, has 700 rooms. The palace is capable of housing thousands of people at a time.
Elisha Otis invented the first practical elevator and demonstrated it at the Crystal Palace Exhibition, New York in 1854
It is STILL standing, it was first erected (completed) in 1833 and was the front gate to Buckingham Palace. It was moved to its current location in 1851.
Today, Versailles is an UNESCO World Heritage Site. Louis XIII Built a hunting lodge there in 1623.
Louis the XIII built it first but then his son stayed there after Louis the XIII died and made it much bigger
The Alexandra Palace has about 1,000 rooms. When the Romanov's lived there, there were hundreds of servants there, too.
The Palace of Versailles, originally a hunting lodge for King Louis XIII, was first built in 1623. It was later transformed and expanded into a grand palace by his son, King Louis XIV, starting in 1661, with significant renovations and expansions continuing throughout the 17th and 18th centuries. The palace became a symbol of absolute monarchy and the center of political power in France.
Elisha Graves Otis is credited with inventing the safety elevator in 1852. His innovation included a mechanism that prevented the elevator from falling if the hoisting cable broke. Otis demonstrated his safety elevator at the Crystal Palace Exposition in New York City in 1854, which significantly contributed to the development of modern skyscrapers and urban architecture.
The modern elevator was invented in 1852 by Elisha Otis, who developed a safety mechanism that prevented the elevator from falling if the cable broke. While elevators in some form existed before this, Otis's invention marked a significant advancement that made elevators safer and more practical for commercial and residential use. His first public demonstration of the safety elevator took place at the Crystal Palace in New York City in 1854.
Roped (traction) elevators came first. Otis Elevator Company invented the modern elevator in 1853 which used ropes. Otis Elevator Company then also invented the first hydraulic elevator which was installed in 1909 at the Singer Building in New York City (since demolished).