
Albert Park
Princes Street, Auckland CBD
Albert Park is downtown Auckland's historic central park — 5.

Auckland War Memorial Museum
Parnell, Auckland Domain
The Auckland War Memorial Museum (Tāmaki Paenga Hira) is the city's most important museum — a Greek Revival temple atop a volcanic cone in the Auckland Domain that combines three collections: New Zealand's finest Māori and Pacific taonga (treasures), a natural history collection, and a WWI and WWII memorial that is New Zealand's most visited.

Cornwall Park
Greenlane Road West, Epsom
Cornwall Park is 220 hectares of working farmland in the middle of Auckland — gifted to the city in 1901 by John Logan Campbell as a 'people's park' and still grazed by sheep, beef cattle, and the Belgian blue breeding herd that makes the park a surreal pastoral landscape ringed by suburban houses.

Devonport (Ferry & Walk)
Devonport, North Shore
Devonport is a Victorian seaside suburb on the North Shore — a 12-minute ferry ride from the downtown Auckland ferry terminal that functions like a weekend time capsule, preserving the 19th-century wooden villas, corner shops, and military heritage of Auckland's oldest European settlement.

Mount Eden (Maungawhau)
Mt Eden Road, Mount Eden
Maungawhau / Mount Eden is the highest natural point on the Auckland isthmus — a 196-metre volcanic cone that last erupted about 28,000 years ago and was one of the most important Māori pā (fortified settlements) in the country, with terraces, food storage pits, and defensive trenches carved into the cone that are still visible today.

Mount Victoria (Takarunga)
Kerr Street, Devonport
Mount Victoria (Takarunga) is a small volcanic cone behind Devonport village on the North Shore — only 87 metres tall but offering one of the best panoramic views of Auckland, with the downtown CBD, the Harbour Bridge, the Waitematā, and the outer islands all visible from the summit.

One Tree Hill (Maungakiekie)
Cornwall Park, Epsom
Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill is a 182-metre volcanic cone in the heart of Auckland — the largest pre-European pā (fortified Māori settlement) in the country, whose hillside terraces and food pits once supported thousands of people and whose summit was one of the most important ceremonial sites in the Auckland region.
Explore history in Auckland
GPS-guided narration at every landmark. Tap a spot on the map, hear the story. Every fact verified.