A photograph of the Green Frame exhibition in a warehouse on Waltham Road.
A photograph of the Green Frame exhibition in a warehouse on Waltham Road.
A photograph of the Green Frame exhibition in a warehouse on Waltham Road.
A photograph of the Green Frame exhibition in a warehouse on Waltham Road.
A photograph of the Green Frame exhibition in a warehouse on Waltham Road.
A photograph of the Green Frame exhibition in a warehouse on Waltham Road.
A photograph of the Green Frame exhibition in a warehouse on Waltham Road.
A photograph of All Right? flags with different slogans along a grassy hill at the University of Canterbury. All Right? posted the photograph on their Facebook page on 9 July 2013 at 4:26pm.
Billy Kristian of The Invaders shares his memories of Ray Columbus who has died at the age of 74. Islay Marsden of the University of Canterbury discusses what clearing rocks and silt from quake-induced landslides will do to the coastal environment. Kevin Furlong of Penn State University discusses the connection between the earthquakes and various faultline systems.
A document outlining the Emergency Management Policy at the University of Canterbury in the time between the 4 September 2010 and 22 February 2011 earthquake. This policy was developed to provide a mandate for decisions that need to be taken to most appropriately and expeditiously respond to a planned event or unforeseen critical incident at the University of Canterbury.
A view of the UBS building at the University of Canterbury, seen from level 7 of the James Hight building. The photographer comments, "First looks at our new temporary (maybe) office space. Our group will stay here until April or May 2011, then will move to another floor in the Central Library. The University Book Shop building".
A scanned copy of a close-up photograph of the plaque on the University of Canterbury UCSA (then Students' Union) building.
A scanned copy of a photograph of Joan Smith, Executive President of the UCSA (University of Canterbury Student's Association) in 1992.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Christchurch earthquake. Jason Kerrison (OpShop frontman) chats with Ashleigh-Marie Watts this afternoon at Canterbury University".
Lydia Baxendell, Art Collections curator at the University of Canterbury loads a painting into a van, saved from the Registry Building.
A crack in a wall of the University of Canterbury Electronic Learning Media team's offices. The photographer comments, "Cracks in walls".
A news item titled, "Canterbury University Earthquake Lectures", published on the Lyttelton Harbour Information Centre's website on Friday, 23 September 2011.
A photograph of a worker evaluating the fallen ceiling tiles and pink batts in a teaching room at the University of Canterbury.
Earthquake engineers at the University of Canterbury are world-leaders in designing buildings that will be better able to withstand earthquake shaking.
University of Canterbury's John Hopkins and Toni Collins explain disaster law and shortcomings in NZ's legal system highlighted by the Canterbury earthquakes.
Students from the University of Canterbury photographed in front of one of the pianos they painted for Gap Filler's Painted Piano project.
One of Gap Filler's painted pianos painted by students at the University of Canterbury. The piano has been painted in multicoloured squares.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Christchurch earthquake. Jason Kerrison (OpShop frontman) right chats with Ashleigh-Marie Watts this afternoon at Canterbury University
A video recording of a lecture presented by Professor Stefano Pampanin as part of the 2011 University of Canterbury Earthquake Lecture Series.
Students from the University of Canterbury photographed in front of one of the pianos they painted for Gap Filler's Painted Piano project.
A photograph of a worker evaluating the fallen ceiling tiles and pink batts in a teaching room at the University of Canterbury.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Tim Stahl from Canterbury University maps the fault line west of Rolleston with GPS equipment after Saturday's earthquake".
A zip file of an interactive 360-degree panoramic photograph in HTML5 format. The photograph was taken at Lincoln University, between Ivey Hall and George Forbes on 27 January 2012.
Shaking table testing of a full-scale three storey resilient and reparable complete composite steel framed building system is being conducted. The building incorporates a number of interchangeable seismic resisting systems of New Zealand and Chinese origin. The building has a steel frame and cold formed steel-concrete composite deck. Energy is dissipated by means of friction connections. These connections are arranged in a number of structural configurations. Typical building nonskeletal elements (NSEs) are also included. Testing is performed on the Jiading Campus shaking table at Tongji University, Shanghai, China. This RObust BUilding SysTem (ROBUST) project is a collaborative China-New Zealand project sponsored by the International Joint Research Laboratory of Earthquake Engineering (ILEE), Tongji University, and a number of agencies and universities within New Zealand including BRANZ, Comflor, Earthquake Commission, HERA, QuakeCoRE, QuakeCentre, University of Auckland, and the University of Canterbury. This paper provides a general overview of the project describing a number of issues encountered in the planning of this programme including issues related to international collaboration, the test plan, and technical issues.
Shaking table testing of a full-scale three storey resilient and reparable complete composite steel framed building system is being conducted. The building incorporates a number of interchangeable seismic resisting systems of New Zealand and Chinese origin. The building has a steel frame and cold formed steel-concrete composite deck. Energy is dissipated by means of friction connections. These connections are arranged in a number of structural configurations. Typical building non-skeletal elements (NSEs) are also included. Testing is performed on the Jiading Campus shaking table at Tongji University, Shanghai, China. This RObust BUilding SysTem (ROBUST) project is a collaborative China-New Zealand project sponsored by the International Joint Research Laboratory of Earthquake Engineering (ILEE), Tongji University, and a number of agencies and universities within New Zealand including the BRANZ, Comflor, Earthquake Commission, HERA, QuakeCoRE, QuakeCentre, University of Auckland, and the University of Canterbury. This paper provides a general overview of the project describing a number of issues encountered in the planning of this programme including issues related to international collaboration, the test plan, and technical issues.