A photograph of the corner of Manchester Street and Cashel Street. The site has been fenced off and there is building rubble on the ground. There is a coloured tape installation on the fence, and an image of Homer Simpson on the exposed wall of the second storey of the building.
A photograph of the Christchurch Club.
A photograph of the Christchurch Club.
The Canterbury earthquake series of 2010/2011 has turned the city of Christchurch into a full scale natural laboratory testing the structural and non-structural response of buildings under moderate to very severe earthquake shaking. The lessons learned from this, which have come at great cost socially and economically, are extremely valuable in increasing our understanding of whole building performance in severe earthquakes. Given current initiatives underway on both sides of the Tasman towards developing joint Australasian steel and composite steel/concrete design and construction standards that would span a very wide range of geological conditions and seismic zones, these lessons are relevant to both countries. This paper focusses on the performance of steel framed buildings in Christchurch city, with greatest emphasis on multi-storey buildings, but also covering single storey steel framed buildings and light steel framed housing. It addresses such issues as the magnitude and structural impact of the earthquake series, importance of good detailing, lack of observed column base hinging, the excellent performance of composite floors and it will briefly cover research underway to quantify some of these effects for use in design.
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The old Telecom building on Hereford Street".
A photograph of building rubble on Tuam Street, near the corner of High Street.
A spray-painted smiley face on a window of the partially-demolished BNZ building.
A photograph of damaged buildings on Hereford Street. The road has been fenced off.
A photograph looking across from Cashel Street to cleared building sites on High Street
A photograph of part of the remaining facade of a building on Madras Street.
A spray-painted smiley face on a window of the partially-demolished BNZ building.
The west face of the former Christchurch City Council building, seen from Colombo Street.
A photograph of part of the remaining facade of a building on Madras Street.
A photograph looking across from Cashel Street to cleared building sites on High Street
An aerial photograph of new rowing club buildings along the Avon River in Wainoni.
A vacant demolition site where buildings once stood. Weeds are growing on the site.
A photograph of building rubble on Tuam Street, near the corner of High Street.
Strange sign when the building it refers to is no longer there. Earthquake damage.
This is in Madras St, The CTV building ws on the right far corner
None
Due to earthquake damage.
The University of Canterbury's CEISMIC project is building a digital archive of earthquake-related information
A photograph of a damaged building. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "Hereford Street".
Shands Emporium standing alone on Hereford Street, the buildings on either side of it demolished.
Construction workers' vehicles on High Street. In the background, high-reach excavators demolish a building.
The partially-demolished BNZ building, with the former site of the ANZ in the background.
The rear of the old City Council building on Tuam Street, seen from Cashel Street.
A sculpture on Poplar Lane visible from High Street after the surrounding buildings were demolished.
A photograph looking across to Hereford Street from a cleared building site on Cashel Street.
A photograph of concrete blocks and steel beams reinforcing a brick building on Hereford Street.