So fun urban planning story time:
Changing heights at the last minute is not all that uncommon, and possibly one of the most famous one is the Chrysler Building in Manhattan. The Empire State Building and Chrysler Building were being built at the same time (finished 11 months apart). They were in a race to be the tallest building in NYC (and the world at the time). Both were being very vague about their height at the time.
As the Chrysler Building was nearing completion, as an effort to conceal the actual height, they built the spire within the Art Deco roof, and on the day before the building was to officially open, they pushed the spire up through the roof, going from 925 feet tall, to 1,046 feet tall.
Of course all of this ended up being little more than showsmanship, as the Empire State Building was still under construction, the planner simply added another 5 floors, then the 200 foot spire (that’s now very iconic), and finally a 222 foot “mooring post”.
Interestingly it was during this time of skyscrapers and “The race for the sky” that the idea of “height restrictions” started to come into play, as planners needed better control over what was happening, mostly so no last minute unsafe changes could happen to a building.