Chriscrawfordphoto
Real Men Shoot Film.
Amazing!
That reminds me of a similar situation and shock I had.
In 2013 I was doing some temporary contract work and on my drive to work I noticed this … structure … (I’m being deliberately vague here) which seemed to loom over the landscape. I started making photos of it - from a distance and close up. I realized that the photo angle I wanted could only be made from land across the highway, but I wasn’t sure how to get to the spot I needed (the land across the highway was a maze of small farms, fields, and light industrial warehouses). So I used Google Maps to look at the area and find my way.
Once I was at the proper location across the highway for my photos, I noticed that the little road I was on, which was more of a paved path than a road, was lined with rows of nice large trees on each side. The road continued for a short distance, to a sort of traffic circle. One exit of the circle was barricaded and I noticed that trees had been cut down along the road along the barricaded exit. That was actually a longer road. So, clearly, the land beyond the traffic circle was being developed.
Curious about this location now, I looked at the satellite view of Google Maps and then the Street View. The Street View! I was amazed - what it showed was that in the recent past there had actually been a single long road lined with these nice large trees on each side, forming a canopy for the entire length. So that was now gone except for the short length of road I had been on. What could I do to preserve this earlier view? The only thing I could think of was to make screenshots from Street View. That is what I did and I put these all together in a document on my PC.
I haven’t shown it to anyone yet - I have just one printed copy. What someone would see on viewing this document are about a dozen photos of pleasant scenes along this tree-lined road - as if actually being there. The last page, however, simply has the words “This no longer exists.”
None of those trees exist now; not a single one. The road has also been renamed - because its original name wouldn’t make sense now in the absence of any trees and might even make someone wonder what existed before. Oddly Google Street View has not caught up to the present, but shows the road as I saw it in 2013. I suspect even that view will be gone soon.
I've seen that sort of thing happen a lot. Many of the places that I have photographed have been destroyed. Trees bulldozed, buildings torn down. We preserve 'what was' so that those to come will know what had been.

This is one of my favorite examples. This house sat abandoned for many years on the northeastern edge of Fort Wayne. I lived near there at the time and often drive past it, but had not had a chance to photograph it. One day, I drive by and saw a bulldozer in the yard in front of it. I went back the next day and photographed it. The inside was incredible. In the walk-in attic, I found this:

A wedding dress left hanging in the attic, still in plastic protective bag. The roof was mostly gone, the floor covered in ice and snow, but the dress remained. The house was demolished the next day.