
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Canterbury Museum".
The Canterbury earthquakes are behind a big blowout in the Government's deficit which has grown to a record 18-point-4 billion dollars.
A new agreement's been reached on how earthquake claims for seriously damaged mortgaged houses in Canterbury will be handled.
A chart showing population changes in Canterbury.
An infographic about hydraulic fracturing in Canterbury.
Fallen scaffolding around the Canterbury Provincial Chambers.
Damage to the Canterbury Provincial Government Buildings.
Damage to the Canterbury Provincial Government Buildings.
Fallen scaffolding around the Canterbury Provincial Chambers.
A photograph of SPCA Field Officer Vanessa Hampton recording details of an owned cat whose family had to vacate their home after the 22 February 2011 earthquake.
A photograph of a member of the SPCA returning an animal to its owner in the Countdown car park on Moorhouse Avenue.
Classrooms in Kirkwood Village.
Classrooms in Kirkwood Village.
Classrooms in Kirkwood Village.
School of Forestry signage.
School of Forestry signage.
Damage on Worcester Street.
A black and white historic photograph of John Anderson and his foreman, Mr A. Kirk, standing outside the foundry at the back of the Andersons' building, [ca. 1900].
Fallen trees beside a house in rural Canterbury.
A photograph submitted by Bettina Evans to the QuakeStories website. The description reads, "Canterbury Street, Lyttelton, after Feb, EQ".
A photograph of a letter on display in the Canterbury Quakes exhibition at the Canterbury Museum. The letter was found in a time capsule in the plinth of the statue of John Robert Godley in Cathedral Square after the 22 February 2011 earthquake.
A photograph of a letter on display in the Canterbury Quakes exhibition at the Canterbury Museum. The letter was found in a time capsule in the plinth of the statue of John Robert Godley in Cathedral Square after the 22 February 2011 earthquake.
The Civil Defense understanding of the role of radio in disaster tends to focus on its value in providing essential information during and after the event. However this role is compromised when a station’s premises are destroyed, or rendered inaccessible by official cordons. The Radio Quake study examines how radio stations in Christchurch managed to resume broadcasting in the aftermath of the earthquake of February 22, 2011. In New Zealand’s heavily networked and commercialised radio environment there is a significant disparity between networked and independent stations’ broadcast commitments and resourcing. All Christchurch radio broadcasters were forced to improvise new locations, complex technical workarounds, and responsive styles of broadcasting after the February 22 earthquake, but the need to restore, or maintain, a full on air presence after the earthquake, rested entirely on often financially tenuous, locally owned and staffed independent radio: student, Iwi, community access, and local commercial stations. This paper will explore the resourcefulness and resilience of broadcasters riding out the aftershocks in hotels, motels, bedrooms, and a horse truck, using digital technologies in new ways to reimagine the practice of radio in Christchurch.
A photograph of the damaged Canterbury Brewery.
A photograph of the damaged Canterbury Brewery.
Crowds at the Canterbury A&P Show.
A photograph of the damaged Canterbury Brewery.
A photograph of 26 Canterbury Street in Lyttelton.
Graphs showing population changes in Canterbury.
The newly renovated Library Undercroft.