Well, sure. You can do all sorts of things. But you're still looking at stacking rather a lot of bricks on top of one brick.
I mean, were it just a matter of "a brick can support 100 meters of brick on top of it", I'd say, sure, obviously we can do that in real life. It'll be hard, but we can probably do it. But you have to put another ~1.5 orders of magnitude of pressure on... this is going to be "decidedly nontrivial", to borrow the mathematician's phrase. I'm not ready to say it's absolutely impossible, but it's in the "I'll believe it when I see it" class. That is a lot of bricks you are trying to stack on with no other failures getting in you way, and when you're dealing with that sort of accumulation of brick, micrometer variations you'd normally never even consider worrying about start stacking up....