Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
View down Colombo Street. Some damage to buildings can be seen to the left and a demolition site on the right.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Demolition site behind behind the cordon fence. Some graffiti on the wall and a crane can be seen in the background.
A poster with the words love on the fence just down from the empty site where the CTV building was.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
The underlying geological issues hidden beneath Christchurch’s swampy plains meant that the city’s founders and their surveyors who chose this site for their planned city, knew nothing …
A video of an interview with Andy Cole, site supervisor at Geovert, about the procedure for blasting rocks in Hillsborough. The rock-blasting work was paid for by two Christchurch couples whose properties were red-zoned and red-stickered. The couples hope that the blasting work will encourage CERA to change their land zoning from red to green, allowing them to rebuild their homes on the same sites.
A graphic promoting a video on the press.co.nz site, titled, "What makes our schools so special".
A graphic for an article on a proposed development for the former railway station site on Moorhouse Avenue.
A photograph of volunteers who contributed to building a BMX track on an empty site on Colombo Street.
A photograph of volunteers laying bricks to create a labyrinth on the former site of St Luke's church.
A photograph of diggers clearing rubble from the site of the partially-demolished St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
An earthquake memories story from Murray White, Site Trades Supervisor, Burwood Hospital, titled, "Pipes fractured in numerous places".
A charitable trust which began after the earthquakes to create and maintain temporary public parks on cleared sites in Christchurch.
Site developed by the Waimakariri District Council with information about earthquake relief efforts in the Kaiapoi and Pines/Kairaki areas.
Site set up to market Christchurch businesses after the Christchurch earthquake. Directory entries of Christchurch businesses arranged by business type.
A digger at the demolition site of the Gallery Apartments on Gloucester Street. A 'No entry' sign has been placed on the security fencing.
The demolition site of the Gallery Apartments building. A sign that reads, 'Road closed' has been placed in front of the security fencing.
A digger at the demolition site of the Gallery Apartments on Gloucester Street. A 'No entry' sign has been placed on the security fencing.
A demolition site on the corner of Welles and Colombo Streets. Road cones have been placed along the street to divert the traffic.
A demolition site on the corner of Welles and Colombo Streets. Road cones have been placed along the street to divert the traffic.
The intersection of Aberdeen and Manchester Street. Straight ahead is St Mary's Catholic Church and a demolition site is on the right.
Poster starting to peel off a corrugated wall next to demolition site. A section of damaged property can be seen above the fence.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building at the corner of Worcester Street and Stanmore Road.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building at the corner of Worcester Street and Stanmore Road.
A hand painted poster on the fence around the site where the CTV building use to be. On it is the word 'Faith'.
Detail of the backs of buildings on High Street, seen from St Asaph Street. A portaloo and road cones on the empty site.
Fencing around the vacant lot left by the Copthorne Hotel which has been demolished. Some building rubble still remains on the site.