NEW YORK — When a Virginia teenager began scaling the glass walls of Trump Tower this week, journalists covering his dramatic climb live struggled to answer basic questions: Who was he? Why was he doing it?
And also, how many stories is Trump Tower anyway?
Does it have 68 floors, as the Trump Organization claims in its marketing materials, or 58, which is the figure listed in databases of tall buildings kept by organizations like the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitats?
The height of Trump buildings, as measured in stories, has actually been a point of contention and some media scrutiny for years.
In a 2003 interview with The New York Times, Trump acknowledged that he had skipped 10 numbers when labeling the residential floors of Trump Tower. He said it was justified because the ceilings on the lower floors, which include commercial space and the tower's grand atrium, were so tall.
"It was all approved," the now Republican presidential candidate then said. "'I brought it before the various agencies and got them to agree that I could start the building at Floor 30, because it equated to approximately 300 feet above ground.'"
That same story noted that condominium buyers in other Trump buildings were sometimes required to sign documents acknowledging that their units were on floors lower than the ones listed on elevator buttons.
Trump business and campaign representatives didn't immediately answer a question about the floor discrepancy.