The ground floor isn't "1" because of different numbering conventions: British English calls the street level the Ground Floor, then the one above is the First Floor (like 'G', '1', '2'), while American English calls the street level the First Floor, then the one above is the Second Floor (like '1', '2', '3'). The British system reflects the floor being on the ground, while the American system starts counting from the first numbered level, a difference rooted in historical building styles where lower levels were for animals or storage before elevated living floors.
British/European System (G, 1, 2...)
Ground Floor: The level at street entry.
First Floor: The floor immediately above the Ground Floor.
Origin: In older European buildings, the ground level (often damp or for animals) wasn't a primary living space, so the first actual living floor above it was numbered "1".
American System (1, 2, 3...)
First Floor: The level at street entry.
Second Floor: The floor immediately above the First Floor.
Origin: A simpler, more direct numbering system that starts counting from the street level as "1".
Key Difference
The British "First Floor" is the American "Second Floor".
The British "Ground Floor" is the American "First Floor".