Liszt planned to build a modern castle.
With rubber and ironwood, many plans could be realized—of course, there was no money to build a castle now, and he would have to live in a cash-strapped situation for a few days.
This did not hinder him from planning the location of the castle's construction, as well as its footprint, floor height, and other requirements.
An attached castle was generally the tallest building in a city. Fresh Flower Town's Nameless Castle only had two floors; most unnamed castles stood between two and three floors in height.
Named castles were mostly four floors high, and many viscounts and earls would build four-story castles. Beyond the four-story main body, there might be an even taller spire for vigilance and defense. Tulip Castle was a four-story castle, but it looked particularly majestic as it was built according to the mountain terrain.
Nobles generally chose steep and rugged terrains for their castles, easy to defend and hard to attack.