While this is simply my home, it is also the start of my journey to see some of the world's most well-known feats of engineering. Engineers have existed for a long time, the first one known by name and achievement is Imhotep, builder of the Step Pyramid at Ṣaqqārah, Egypt, probably about 2550 BCE, but they were not always called engineers. The term engineer originates from the Latin word "ingeniare", meaning "to contrive, invent, or devise" which dates back to the 14th century. Most, if not all, of these have had significant importance to civilization as a whole across time, and the amount of effort used to bring these goliaths of engineering is simply astounding. From the Panama Canal, a man-made canal made specifically to make the trip between the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean quicker, to the Great Wall of China, a wall made to defend the border of China from invasions by nomadic nations, that stretches over 13,000 miles (or over 21,000 kilometers). I hope to build something that can live up to the great importance and significance all these feats of engineering boast. One day, I will engineer something that will be useful for mankind, and if I am lucky, it will be memorized in history as one of the greatest feats of engineering. While researching, I was debating whether or not I can choose the International Space Station (you can't, since it is not on the map), and learned that Neil Armstrong is an engineer, which was something I did not know.