Bateman would be also committed to design the Palacio de Aguas Corrientes, a monumental water pumping station on Córdoba Avenue of Buenos Aires.
[7] The practice of football in Argentina was spread thanks to Lamont and Alexander Watson Hutton, who later established Alumni, the most successful team until its dissolution in 1911.
[10][11][2] After the season concluded (and the AAFL dissolved that same year), Old Caledonians would not play any other official championship (now organised by the Argentine Football Association established in 1893).
Only some records of few friendly matches in 1892 and 1893 survive, but it was believed that OCFC dissolved after the workers came returned to the United Kingdom when the Palacio de Aguas Corrientes building was finished in 1894.
[15] Despite this, football historians state that the AAFL claimed both, Old Caledonians and St. Andrew's, as champions, so the last game was played only to define what team would be awarded medals.