Ok, I keep seeing this South Korea's mall building breaking down because it doesn't have inner support.
If this is about the design I mentioned,
the subtractive manufacturing like the interlocking wood subtracted with a router,
only as a large compressed brick and CNC machine on top,
I clearly mention, there should be drills (many, simultaneous) that drills itself
vertically and horizontally to what is left (walls) from the hollow cavity of the brick.
Drill the walls, insert with iron rods, the support beams, interlock them together/weld
them together with another machine, and pour cement into it.
As for the streets in-between the buildings,
when the bricks are dugged out with the CNC machines,
the powder form of whatever is, should be compressed again as an much smaller bricks
to cover the street, designed in such a way that it leaves certain room for
cement covering while interlocking itself together with other bricks.
There would be many machines and steps involved in all this,
but it would essentially be automated.
Placing brick compartments on another brick compartment,
which should have protruding iron support rods/beams prior
on the level below, should sustain itself to certain heights.
(Which is dependant on how big the compressed brick + thickness of the walls in the first place)
Stairs can be dugged out, shaped by the CNC machines so,
in a way, it would/could look like adobe-type of buildings,
or ones you see in middle east or Greece.
But. Arrangement is entirely up to the designer. With additional enhancements,
it can look modern and futuristic as well.
So I don't know why people keep relaying that shopping mall breaking down,
structurally, it should be good enough. I also mentioned the foundation as well,
which should be built prior. Remember, both horizontal and vertical. Dugged out by drill, as a large cylinder that overlaps each other's path.
Inner rods are then interlocked to be welded together, further joined by pouring in the liquid cement.