Residents and workers preparing for cleanup. Some are wearing face masks to protect themselves from the dust from liquefaction silt.
A photograph of a shop window plastered with posters advertising the Rally for the Cathedral.
A copy of the award application for the Canterbury Heritage Awards 2016.
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 16 November 2012 entitled, "Artist Profile: JAnes Hobby".
A document which provides simple, easy to understand environmental advice and guidance for civil construction contractors.
Residents and workers preparing for cleanup. Some are wearing face masks to protect themselves from the dust from liquefaction silt.
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 11 December 2012 entitled, "New day - new artworks".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The Gondola has been closed for a year".
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 6 November 2012 entitled, "Mural Madness Week One".
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 2 March 2014 entitled, "Quake damaged Catholic Cathedral".
An award submission nominating SCIRT Women in Construction (SWIC) for the 2015 Diversity Awards: Category: Empowerment.
Residents and workers preparing for cleanup. Some are wearing face masks to protect themselves from the dust from liquefaction silt.
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 14 October 2012 entitled, "External painting goes ahead".
A sign on the fence of a building on Gloucester Street reads, 'For lease'.
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 3 November 2012 entitled, "Day 2 Mural Madness".
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 10 November 2012 entitled, "but wait, there's more!".
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 9 October 2013 entitled, "Romance Blossoms - CCL Blog".
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Lanterns for the Chinese New Year Festival in North Hagley Park".
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 3 September 2013 entitled, "Councillor Glenn Livingstone visits".
An entry from Sue Davidson's blog for 1 November 2012 entitled, "Launch of Mural Madness".
A runsheet created for the SCIRT and New Zealand Red Cross humaneers action learning group.
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 23 October 2010 entitled, "Band Together".
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 5 September 2010 entitled, "Today I'm...".
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 20 June 2011 entitled, "Thrifty finds...".
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 28 April 2011 entitled, "Thursday Thrifty Finds....".
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 30 September 2011 entitled, "Hurray! Good news...".
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 17 May 2012 entitled, "Last Saturday Morning....".
The greater Wellington region, New Zealand, is highly vulnerable to large earthquakes. While attention has been paid to the consequences of earthquake damage to road, electricity and water supply networks, the consequences of wastewater network damage for public health, environmental health and habitability of homes remain largely unknown for Wellington City. The Canterbury and Kaikōura earthquakes have highlighted the vulnerability of sewerage systems to disruption during a disaster. Management of human waste is one of the critical components of disaster planning to reduce faecal-oral transmission of disease and exposure to disease-bearing vectors. In Canterbury and Kaikōura, emergency sanitation involved a combination of Port-a-loos, chemical toilets and backyard long-drops. While many lessons may be learned from experiences in Canterbury earthquakes, it is important to note that isolation is likely to be a much greater factor for Wellington households, compared to Christchurch, due to the potential for widespread landslides in hill suburbs affecting road access. This in turn implies that human waste may have to be managed onsite, as options such as chemical toilets and Port-a-loos rely completely on road access for delivering chemicals and collecting waste. While some progress has been made on options such as emergency composting toilets, significant knowledge gaps remain on how to safely manage waste onsite. In order to bridge these gaps, laboratory tests will be conducted through the second half of 2019 to assess the pathogen die-off rates in the composting toilet system with variables being the type of carbon bulking material and the addition of a Bokashi composting activator.
In this paper we apply Full waveform tomography (FWT) based on the Adjoint-Wavefield (AW) method to iteratively invert a 3-D geophysical velocity model for the Canterbury region (Lee, 2017) from a simple initial model. The seismic wavefields was generated using numerical solution of the 3-D elastodynamic/ visco- elastodynamic equations (EMOD3D was adopted (Graves, 1996)), and through the AW method, gradients of model parameters (compression and shear wave velocity) were computed by implementing the cross-adjoint of forward and backward wavefields. The reversed-in-time displacement residual was utilized as the adjoint source. For inversion, we also account for the near source/ station effects, gradient precondition, smoothening (Gaussian filter in spatial domain) and optimal step length. Simulation-to-observation misfit measurements based on 191 sources at 78 seismic stations in the Canterbury region (Figure 1) were used into our inversion. The inversion process includes multiple frequency bands, starting from 0-0.05Hz, and advancing to higher frequency bands (0-0.1Hz and 0-0.2Hz). Each frequency band was used for up to 10 iterations or no optimal step length found. After 3 FWT inversion runs, the simulated seismograms computed using our final model show a good matching with the observed seismograms at frequencies from 0 - 0.2 Hz and the normalized least-squared misfit error has been significantly reduced. Over all, the synthetic study of FWT shows a good application to improve the crustal velocity models from the existed geological models and the seismic data of the different earthquake events happened in the Canterbury region.
Following the 2010–2011 Canterbury earthquakes, a renewed focus has been directed across New Zealand to the hazard posed by the country‘s earthquake-vulnerable buildings, namely unreinforced masonry (URM) and reinforced concrete (RC) buildings with potentially nonductile components that have historically performed poorly in large earthquakes. The research reported herein was pursued with the intention of addressing several recommendations made by the Canterbury Earthquakes Royal Commission of Inquiry which were classified into the following general categories: Identification and provisional vulnerability assessment of URM and RC buildings and building components; Testing, assessment, and retrofitting of URM walls loaded out-of-plane, with a particular focus on highly vulnerable URM cavity walls; Testing and assessment of RC frame components, especially those with presumably non-ductile reinforcement detailing; Portfolio management considering risks, regulations, and potential costs for a portfolio that includes several potentially earthquake-vulnerable buildings; and Ongoing investigations and proposed research needs. While the findings from the reported research have implications for seismic assessments of buildings across New Zealand and elsewhere, an emphasis was placed on Auckland given this research program‘s partnership with the Auckland Council, the Auckland region accounting for about a third each of the country‘s population and economic production, and the number and variety of buildings within the Auckland building stock. An additional evaluation of a historic building stock was carried out for select buildings located in Hawke‘s Bay, and additional experimental testing was carried out for select buildings located in Hawke‘s Bay and Christchurch.