Wow terrific job, I knew it was possible but never seen one such work in the flesh. IIRC there was a famous specialist in NY dubbed 'The King of Typewriters' that had an archive of tens of thousands of different typefaces and who could construct any imaginable character set at will. So, somehow he soldered them to levers - that did not make the work any easier though.
BTW I discovered that 'Spanish' keyboard with no inverted quaotation marks but with tilded N are far from unusual in South/Central America, and Costarican, Argentinian and Uruguayan have these and also have fraction keys. All three of them have also both pound and dollar typefaces! Bolivian, Ecuadorian and Mexican keyboards share some of these characteristics (never knew there were that much different 'Spanish' keyboards) . If you want to check there is a nice guy whi patiently shared on Youtube all of 138 different optional keyboards for Everest (Serio) machines. Olivetti surely had at least some declination of these available. Just search the 'tube' video titled : " Identify your typewriter’s keyboard: 138 layouts of different nations " by y-tuber "Old Typerwriters and Calculators" (I do not know if deep link to other services is allowed here). The video is very informative if language layouts are your thing.