I know, but it is called that here. We’re far enough away from each other that it doesn’t cause confusion. Besides, I was born in your Bay Area, so I know the difference. Trublmakr: piedmont = foot of the mountain, so it’s apt for your area.
Tallahassee: The Big Bend because it’s the part of the state where the Peninsula curves around to meet the Panhandle.
Ft. Walton Beach/Destin/Panama City: refer to themselves as the Emerald Coast not the Redneck Rivera anymore.
West Palm/Ft. Lauderdale/Miami: are known as South Florida or the Gold Coast
Vero Beach/Ft. Pierce/Stuart: The Treasure Coast
Titusville/Melbourne/Cape Canaveral: The Space Coast
Jacksonville/St. Augustine: The First Coast, although I think for the Superbowl Jax came up with some new nickname.
Locally in Florida, Tampa/St. Pete are referred to as the Bay area or Tampa Bay but yes, THE Bay area only refers to SF and environs. I usually call the Tampa area the Suncoast.
At one time Tampa was know as America’s Next Great City and Miami was known as The Magic City. I think both of these have been dropped. Oh yeah and Orlando is known as the City Beautiful. (ha ha ha)
Nashville is nicknamed “Music City”, for obvious reasons. Nashville is in Davidson COunty. Davidson County and the surrounding counties are known collectively as “Middle Tennessee”.
The area surrounding Tulsa (in northeastern Oklahoma) is often referred to as “Green Country,” which I think was a coinage of some Chamber of Commerce dudes. While we aren’t exactly the dust bowl, we’re no lush, verdant paradise.
Roanoke is the “Star City”. The reason why we are the “Star City” is because we saw fit to build a bigass (88 1/2 ft tall) neonstar on the top of Mill Mountain. Why exactly we did this continues to be unknown even to us, though a local historic society consisting of me suspects that it was so we could also build the Extremely Groovy Ski-Lift Type Dealybob that used to carry tourists up the mountain to look at it. The EGSLTD has since been decommissioned, but the star remains.
Charm City
Mobtown
B-More
Monumental City
City of Firsts (I thinks this is more of a marketing thing and less of a true nickname)
City That Reads (Again, more of a marketing motto, though likely a failed one)
Greatest City in America (Ditto; this one’s on several of our city benches)
I’d query this…the equivalent of ‘metro area’ is surely Greater London (whatever that may be)? All my London-suburb relatives and friends would only consider ‘the smoke’ to mean central London. And that would be if any of them ever used the phrase anyway.
(I prefer Mark & Lard’s “London Village”, anyway…)
All those cities on the Eastern Seaboard sandwiched between the coastal plain and the mountains can be properly referred to as The Piedmont, because they reside within the geographical region known as “the Piedmont.” The Piedmont stretches up the south and east sides of the Appalachians from Montgomery, Alabama, through central Georgia (including Atlanta, which is also frequently referred to a the Piedmont,) through the central Carolinas, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, etc. and finally terminates at (and just to the west of) the glacial moraine feature known as Long Island. Parts of NYC are Piedmont.
The Piedmont is usually thought of as the eastern foothills to the Appalachians (with the entirely different and fascinating in itself Cumberland Plateau to the west.) The Piedmont was itself an extremely lofty mountain range at one point. It is defined along its eastern flank (forming the coastal plain) by a feature called a “peneplain.” Essentially, this is an erosional landform only formed by many hundreds of millions of years of steady weathering. They are closely associated with very old mountain ranges. The present Appalachians have undergone many periods of uplift and erosion, and at the time when they were highest (just after the collision with the North African plate which also incidentally raised the High Atlas mountains, the Pennines of the UK, and the famously mountainous spine of Norway, since they were all putatively part of the North American plate and were ripped loose when the two continents retreated from each other,) they were monstrous…higher perhaps than the Himalayas. As a result, the Piedmont was very high as well, being likely higher than the present-day Alps or Caucasus ranges.
The biological diversity of the Piedmont stems from this very fact, since it is an exceptionally ancient landscape with thousands of individual niche habitats. But I seem to have wandered.
Suffice to say that those cities are nicknamed “Piedmont” because they lie within the Piedmont physiographic province.