The demolition site of the Methodist Church on the corner of Colombo and Brougham Street in Sydenham.
The demolition site of the Methodist Church on the corner of Colombo and Brougham Street in Sydenham.
The demolition site of the Methodist Church on the corner of Colombo and Brougham Street in Sydenham.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "HSBC building, 141 Cambridge Terrace being soft stripped prior to demolition".
A pile of demolition rubble on Gloucester Street. The site was formerly that of the Brannigans building.
The Catholic basilica in Christchurch was further damaged in Monday's earthquake making its demolition all but inevitable.
A photograph submitted by Jo Reid to the QuakeStories website. The description reads, "Demolition work underway.".
A photograph of a truck carrying demolition equipment. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "River Road".
A photograph of a truck carrying demolition equipment. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "River Road".
Looking over the cordon fence towards the demolition work on the Manchester Securities House on Gloucester Street.
A photograph of a demolition site. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Norwich Quay, Lyttelton".
A photograph of a demolition site. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Norwich Quay, Lyttelton".
A photograph of a demolition site. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Norwich Quay, Lyttelton".
A colour photograph taken behind the facade of the Excelsior Hotel, showing the demolition of the building.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Line of containers protecting the Cathedral from demolition of surrounding buildings".
Looking inside the cordon fence towards the demolition work on the Manchester Securities House on Gloucester Street.
Yellow ribbons tied to a cordon fence in Cashel Street protest the proposed demolition of the Cathedral.
A photograph of the badly damaged ChristChurch Cathedral, taken from a demolition site in Cathedral Square.
Looking inside the cordon fence towards the demolition work on the Manchester Securities House on Gloucester Street.
A black and white photograph of a steel structure on a demolition site filled with building rubble.
A photograph of a worker spraying water to dampen dust at a demolition site on Lichfield Street.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Our Lady of the Sea Catholic Church at Sumner undergoing demolition".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Demolition site in the foreground, and SOL Square in the background".
A photograph of a demolition site. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Norwich Quay, Lyttelton".
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The demolition of the Bismarck Building at 140 Lichfield Street".
Yellow ribbons tied to a cordon fence in Cashel Street protest the proposed demolition of the Cathedral.
A worker stands in a basket hanging from a crane in a demolition site on Welles Street.
A photograph of a shipping container suspended from a crane. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The container is being placed against the end of the building being demolished to protect the building beneath it from falling debris".
The 2010-2011 Christchurch earthquakes generated damage in several Reinforced Concrete (RC) buildings, which had RC walls as the principal resistant element against earthquake demand. Despite the agreement between structural engineers and researchers in an overall successfully performance there was a lack of knowledge about the behaviour of the damaged structures, and even deeper about a repaired structure, which triggers arguments between different parties that remains up to these days. Then, it is necessary to understand the capacity of the buildings after the earthquake and see how simple repairs techniques improve the building performance. This study will assess the residual capacity of ductile slender RC walls according to current standards in New Zealand, NZS 3101.1 2006 A3. First, a Repaired RC walls Database is created trying to gather previous studies and to evaluate them with existing international guidelines. Then, an archetype building is designed, and the wall is extracted and scaled. Four half-scale walls were designed and will be constructed and tested at the Structures Testing Laboratory at The University of Auckland. The overall dimensions are 3 [m] height, 2 [m] length and 0.175 [m] thick. All four walls will be identical, with differences in the loading protocol and the presence or absence of a repair technique. Results are going to be useful to assess the residual capacity of a damaged wall compare to the original behaviour and also the repaired capacity of walls with simpler repair techniques. The expected behaviour is focussed on big changes in stiffness, more evident than in previously tested RC beams found in the literature.
Decision making on the reinstatement of the Christchurch sewer system after the Canterbury (New Zealand) earthquake sequence in 2010–2011 relied strongly on damage data, in particular closed circuit television (CCTV). This paper documents that process and considers how data can influence decision making. Data are analyzed on 33,000 pipes and 13,000 repairs and renewals. The primary findings are that (1) there should be a threshold of damage per pipe set to make efficient use of CCTV; (2) for those who are estimating potential damage, care must be taken in direct use of repair data without an understanding of the actual damage modes; and (3) a strong correlation was found between the ratio of faults to repairs per pipe and the estimated peak ground velocity. Taken together, the results provide evidence of the extra benefit that damage data can provide over repair data for wastewater networks and may help guide others in the development of appropriate strategies for data collection and wastewater pipe decisions after disasters.