A photograph of scaffolding inside St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
A photograph of rubble from St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
A photograph of rubble from St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
A photograph of rubble from St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
A photograph of a detail of 270 St Asaph Street.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake-damaged St Josephs Church, Lyttelton".
Damage in the kitchen of a house in St Albans.
Damage to St John the Baptist Church in Latimer Square.
Damage in a stairwell inside a house in St Albans.
Damage in the kitchen of a house in St Albans.
Cars driving through flooding and liquefaction on St Martins Road.
Damage in a stairwell inside a house in St Albans.
Damage in the kitchen of a house in St Albans.
Damage in the kitchen of a house in St Albans.
Damage in the kitchen of a house in St Albans.
Damage in the garage of a house in St Albans.
Damage in the bathroom of a house in St Albans.
Damage in the kitchen of a house in St Albans.
Sadly the Chapel has been badly damaged in the magnitude 6.3 earthquake that hit Christchurch 22 February 2011. See below. The Rose Historic Chapel formerly St Mary’s Convent Chapel is the sole survivor of a group of heritage buildings in Christchurch that once comprised the St Mary’s Convent complex for the Sisters of Mercy in North Colombo St...
Sadly the Chapel has been badly damaged in the magnitude 6.3 earthquake that hit Christchurch 22 February 2011. See below. The Rose Historic Chapel formerly St Mary’s Convent Chapel is the sole survivor of a group of heritage buildings in Christchurch that once comprised the St Mary’s Convent complex for the Sisters of Mercy in North Colombo St...
The Christchurch City Council is investing $156 million in 13 cycleways across the city, in a post-earthquake overhaul of the city's transport network.
An entry from Gallivanta's blog for 1 February 2013 entitled, "Healing St Giles".
An archaeological report compiled for New Zealand Historic Places Trust under the Historical Places Act 1993
In the two hours following the earthquake, the St John Ambulance service in Christchurch took more than 353 calls. That compares to just 250 calls it usually receives during a standard 24-hour period. St John's Ambulance operations director, Michael Brook, joins us from Christchurch.
Queenstown and Christchurch are twin poles of New Zealand's landscape of risk. As the country's 'adventure capital', Queenstown is a spectacular landscape in which risk is a commodity. Christchurch's landscape is also risky, ruptured by earthquakes, tentatively rebuilding. As a far-flung group of tiny islands in a vast ocean, New Zealand is the poster-child of the sublime. Queenstown and Christchurch tell two different, yet complementary, stories about the sublime. Christchurch and Queenstown are vehicles for exploring the 21st-century sublime, for reflecting on its expansive influence on shaping cultural landscapes. Christchurch and Queenstown stretch and challenge the sublime's influence on the designed landscape. Circling the paradoxes of risk and safety, suffering and pleasure, the sublime feeds an infinite appetite for fear as entertainment, and at the same time calls for an empathetic caring for a broken landscape and its residents.
A photograph of the entrance to 270 St Asaph Street. A red sticker on the door indicates that the building is unsafe to enter.
A photograph of an excavator clearing the rubble from the demolished building at 270 St Asaph Street.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to 270 St Asaph Street.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to 270 St Asaph Street.
A photograph of an excavator clearing the rubble from the demolished building at 270 St Asaph Street.