A picnic bench on an empty site left after the demolition of a building.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building in Edgeware.
An empty and overgrown space left after the demolition of a building on Victoria Street.
The Durham Street side of the Christchurch Casino, with some cordon fencing on the left.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building in Edgeware.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building in Edgeware.
The vacant lot left after the demolition of St. John's Anglican Church on Latimer Square.
Looking through the cordon fence, an empty site left after the demolition of a building.
A vacant lot left by the demolition of a building has been used for parking.
The vacant lot left after the demolition of St. John's Anglican Church on Latimer Square.
Bronze award recipients, Hannah Duder (second to the left) and Claire Laredo (middle). Both from Chch.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Pupils at South School had a loud shirt day to help raise money for Christchurch earthquake victims. Pictured from left at far back are Jihye Kang, Bradley Messer, Nick Frame, Cody Harford, Miss White, Amber Henderson, Geneva Hatata and Rose Bransgrove. Middle row from left: Jack Ridgway, Miss Sidaway, Eleanor Woodnorth and Tory Simpson. At the front are Maggie Bransgrove and Jordan Murray".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Aftermath of the earthquake in Christchurch where the cleanup has begun. Teams of building inspectors gathered at the Linwood Service Centre before heading into the eastern suburbs en masse. Napier building inspectors Gary Marshall, centre left, and Rod Jarvis were joined by City Council planner, Kent Wilson, right, and Kat Newman, left, who worked as the welfare officer on the team on Dallington Terrace".
Tens of thousands have left Christchurch since the earthquake, and many are planning to stay away for good.
Staff in the Registry Building back at work after cleaning up the mess left by the earthquake.
Workers grinding off the peaks left by the gel injected into the cracks in the James Hight Library walls.
A new way to get students left classroom-less by the Christchurch earthquake back into school is proving successful.
A photograph of 90-92 Chester Street East with 94-96 to the left.
Workers grinding off the peaks left by the gel injected into the cracks in the James Hight Library walls.
Workers grinding off the peaks left by the gel injected into the cracks in the James Hight Library walls.
An empty site left after the demolition of a building on the corner of Worcester and Barbadoes Streets.
A view down Durham Street. Building rubble from the Durham Street Methodist Church can be seen on the left.
A view down Worcester Boulevard, with the HSBC Tower on the left and the Harley Building on the right.
The vacant lot left after the demolition of a block of shops at 461-469 Colombo Street, Sydenham.
Looking to the Alice in Videoland building from a vacant site left by the demolition of a building.
A triangular empty site left after the demolition of a building on the corner of Victoria and Salisbury Streets.
An empty site left by the demolition of a building on the corner of Victoria Street and Bealey Avenue.
An empty site left by the demolition of a building on the corner of Victoria Street and Bealey Avenue.
Canterbury residents were left confused after the earthquake after the news media reported they needed to evacuate but tsunami sirens were silent.
A worker grinding off the peaks left by the gel injected into the cracks in the James Hight Library walls.