Throughout history man has experimented with methods and materials, that is how mechanisation and architecture has advanced.
Some methods and materials failed and lessons were learned and not used again, such as;
'The Cathedral of Saint Peter of Beauvais (French: Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Beauvais) in the northern town of Beauvais, Oise, France.
The cathedral is in the Gothic style, and consists of a 13th-century choir, with an apse and seven polygonal apsidal chapels reached by an ambulatory, joined to a 16th-century transept.
It has the highest Gothic choir in the world: 48.5 metres (159 ft) under vault.[4] From 1569 to 1573 the cathedral of Beauvais was, with its tower of 153 m (502 ft), the highest human construction of the world. Its designers had the ambition to make it the largest gothic cathedral in France ahead of Amiens. Victim of two collapses, one in the 13th century, the other in the 16th century, it remains unfinished today; only the choir and the transept have been built.'
It was a noble attempt to do something heroic in architecture which didn't succeed - no one was at 'fault'.
Still worth a visit, - I once lived near there.