But Auckland could just as easily be dubbed the "city of lava" for the approximately 50 volcanoes dotted around its landscape.
That's right. Fifty(ish).
Though many have been quarried away or are too low to easily spy, volcanic cones still punctuate the skyline.
Historically, the cones provided natural defenses for the terraced "pa" -- or fortified villages -- of local Maori.
So, in the extremely unlikely event that the next eruption occurs when you're visiting one of the Auckland volcanoes listed below, chances are it won't be directly beneath you. Phew.
Meantime, here are some volcanic starting points for exploring the city and its landscape.
Rangitoto
Rangitoto is Auckland's landmark volcano. A low, graceful island cone, it can be seen rising out of the waters of the Hauraki Gulf from many of the city's vantage points.
Visitors can clamber up lava fields and through the world's largest Pohutukawa forest to reach the 259-meter-high (850 feet) crater in an hour on foot, or be driven from the island's wharf to the final 15-minute summit climb. There are a variety of other walks on the island, tunnels and caves to explore and views of the Gulf and back to the city.
North Head/Maungauika and Mount Victoria/Takarunga
Looking back towards the city from Rangitoto, the first two volcanic cones are North Head (Maori name Maungauika) and Mount Victoria (Takarunga) in the North Shore suburb of Devonport.
North Head marks the entrance to Auckland's inner harbor. It has been an important coastal defense site -- initially for New Zealand's indigenous Maori and from the 1800s for the country's defense forces.
Like North Head, Mount Victoria is the site of a former Maori pa (fortified village) and also has military installations and sweeping views.
Pukekawa
The Auckland War Memorial Museum sits opposite North Head, atop the Pukekawa volcanic cone.
The building itself has been substantially renovated over the past two decades, with a seven-story extension in 2006 adding a bronze dome to the neo-classical façade of the 1920s.
The museum is on the edge of Pukekawa's old explosion crater, which is now filled with sports fields, amid the leafy Auckland Domain. The city's oldest park, the Domain, is crisscrossed with walking tracks and also contains a sculpture trail and winter gardens.
From here it's an easy stroll to the boutiques and galleries of Parnell or a short bus-ride to the Newmarket shopping district or central city.
Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill
European settlers named it One Tree Hill in the 1800s due to the solitary native tree at its summit. A settler, however, chopped the tree down and a radiata pine eventually replaced it.
Logan Campbell also donated neighboring Cornwall Park to the public and the two combined make the biggest parkland in Auckland City. It's a slice of rural New Zealand, with roaming livestock and paddocks -- but being in the country's biggest metropolis there's also a pavilion-style cafe and a bistro.
Maungawhau / Mount Eden
From the summit you can stare down into its steep 50-meter-deep crater or get a 360-degree view of the city's sprawling suburbs.
Mangere Mountain
Standing at 106 meters, it has three craters and the Auckland volcanic field's only "tholoid" -- a lava plug that forms a dome in the middle of one of its craters.
The volcano and its surrounds were settled by an iwi (Maori tribe) 700 years ago and became home to around 4,000 people.
Visitors also have the opportunity to participate in traditional activities in context -- for example seeing how food was grown and stored on the mountain, then planting a seedling and preparing a hangi (a meal steamed underground).
It is possible to climb the volcano without a guide as well, with signposting explaining the significance of some sites.