A photograph of the construction of Illusions taking place on an empty site on Gloucester street. The installation is part of LUXCITY.
A photograph of a member of an emergency management team standing on Gloucester Street near Latimer Square. In the background an excavator is clearing the rubble from a demolished building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to the Canterbury Television Building on Gloucester Street. Some of the concrete on the columns has crumbled, revealing the steel reinforcement underneath.
A digital copy of a painting by Julia Holden. The painting is of shipping containers stacked in front of the Isaac Theatre Royal on Gloucester Street.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Gloucester Street - this big machine munches concrete rubble and reduces it to aggregate for hard fill on building sites".
A photograph of the cordon on the Gloucester Street bridge near Cambridge Terrace. Wire fencing has been placed across the bridges with signs reading, "Extreme danger, keep out" and "Warning, no public access beyond this point".
A photograph of the installation titled In Your Face on Gloucester Street, which is part of LUXCITY.
A photograph of the installation titled In Your Face on Gloucester Street, which is part of LUXCITY.
A photograph of the installation titled In Your Face on Gloucester Street, which is part of LUXCITY.
A photograph of the installation titled In Your Face on Gloucester Street, which is part of LUXCITY.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "728 Colombo Street (back view of the Camelot Hotel)".
A photograph of a map used by emergency management personnel to inspect buildings after the 22 February 2011 earthquake. The map is of the block bordered by Barbadoes Street, Worcester Street, Gloucester Street, and Fitzgerald Avenue. Many of the buildings have been highlighted in blue, with some smaller buildings highlighted in orange. Numbers and messages have been written on the map with biro.
A photograph of the LUXCITY project titled Silhouette Carnival, on Gloucester Street. The In Your Face installation can be seen further along the street.
A digital copy of a painting by Julia Holden. The painting is of building rubble and machinery. Gloucester Arcade and the badly-damaged Farmers building are in the background to the right.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "View from Worcester Street at sunset Manchester Street car park (centre)".
A view down Gloucester Street, with the Art Gallery Apartments in the background.
Road closure on Gloucester Street due to the demolition of the Brannigans Building.
Road closure on Gloucester Street due to the demolition of the Brannigans Building.
A photograph taken from the corner of Gloucester Street and Colombo Street of people walking to LUXCITY. A large sign detailing the locations of each installation is attached to a wire fence and a temporary 'no left turn' sign has been installed on the corner.
A photograph of installations being constructed on the corner of Gloucester Street and Colombo Street for the LUXCITY event. In the foreground is the installation titled "In Your Face", and to the right is the installation titled "Etch-a-Sketch".
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Rear of the old City Council Civic Offices in Manchester Street, seen from Gloucester Street".
The Brannigans Building on the corner of Gloucester Street and Oxford Terrace. An army truck is parked just outside the street cordon.
A photograph of the intersection of Gloucester and Madras Streets, looking north east.
A photograph of the intersection of Gloucester and Manchester Streets, looking south east.
Damage to the Cathedral, seen from Gloucester Street during the LuxCity event.
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Intersection of Gloucester and Colombo Streets".
A photograph of a partly demolished Mutual Funds House, viewed from Gloucester Street.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The Crystal Plaza building, 114 Gloucester Street".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Looking from Gloucester Street towards the Cathedral".
Shipping containers support the facade of the Isaac Theatre Royal on Gloucester Street.