Len Brown still has another year as mayor, so I'll leave the eulogies to another time. Except to say, I won't miss the hyperbole. And the rewriting of history that has become part of the first five years of the Super City.
A couple of weeks ago we had Rodney Hide, the Local Government Minister who ushered in the Auckland local government reforms, talking up his brilliant achievements. Then on Sunday we had the inaugural mayor doing the same, as he announced his intention not to contest the 2016 elections.
It was as though they were the 21st century equivalent of Sir John Logan Campbell and business partner William Brown, huddled in their tent in April 1840 at the bottom of what we now know as Queen St, plotting to make a killing when Captain Hobson and his government arrived.
Mr Hide wrote that before he came on the scene, Auckland and its eight councils was "a nightmare ... The major infrastructure works that Auckland needed couldn't happen". He says "all that is now different", claiming central government can now talk to Auckland Council and get answers which "previously was not possible". He added "the failure of Auckland's mayors and councils ever to agree meant nothing much happened. Infrastructure development in Auckland was forever stalled".
He even came up with the nonsense that before the era that began with Rodney and Len, "much of Auckland's water was not safe. Now it is".