Diggers clearing a demolition site in Cathedral Square, seen from Worcester Street.
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "SCIRT site office sign, St Martins".
A PDF copy of The Star newspaper, published on Friday 30 August 2013.
Page 7 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 22 August 2013.
A PDF copy of The Star newspaper, published on Wednesday 11 December 2013.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Monday 12 August 2013.
A vacant demolition site where buildings once stood is surrounded by security fencing.
A photograph of excavators on cleared sites between Cashel Street and Hereford Street.
A photograph of excavators on cleared sites between Cashel Street and Hereford Street.
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Manchester and Tuam Streets, botanical preservation site".
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Manchester and Tuam Streets, botanical preservation site".
A video of an interview with Julia Morison, a Christchurch-based artist, about her sculptures in a vacant site on the Christchurch central city. The artwork, titled 'Tree Houses for Swamp Dwellers', took over a year to make and will act as a centrepiece for the Scape Public Art festival, which begins on 27 September 2013. The sculpture was designed to provide a playground for children and a shady spot for workers on their lunch breaks. Morison also talks about how the sculpture was designed to be relocated and reconfigured so that it can be moved to a new location when construction begins on the vacant site.
A photograph looking across from Cashel Street to cleared building sites on High Street
A photograph looking across from Cashel Street to cleared building sites on High Street
The partially-demolished BNZ building, with the former site of the ANZ in the background.
A empty site in Bexley where a house once stood is surrounded by security fencing.
A photograph of an empty site on the corner of Cashel Street and High Street.
A photograph looking across to Hereford Street from a cleared building site on Cashel Street.
A photograph of an excavator on a demolition site between Hereford Street and Colombo Street.
Volunteers setting up one of the painted pianos on the site of a demolished building.
Mike Hewson's art work on the site of the former public toilets in Hereford Street.
A video of an interview with Shaun Gladwell, a London-based artist, about the sculptures he designed for the Christchurch central city. Gladwell talks about how the sculptures are based on skateboard forms and have been designed to be used by skateboarders. He also talks about being inspired by YouTube videos of Christchurch skateboarders who used the damaged landscape in Christchurch as a skate park after the 22 February 2011 earthquake. The video includes clips from some of these YouTube videos.
Cultural heritage is a dynamic concept, incorporating the ideas and values of many different organisations and individuals; it is heavily dependent on the context of the item or site being conserved, and transforms something from an old article into a historically significant object. A formal definition of cultural heritage did not appear in the Antarctic Treaty System until 1995, however Antarctic heritage value has been applied to various sites and monuments since the inception of the Treaty, from Shackleton’s Nimrod Hut to a heavy tractor. This report examines a number of case studies to determine the various ways in which heritage items and sites can be managed – such as the removal of the South Pole Dome – as well as their conservation after natural disasters, for instance the Christchurch earthquakes.
A photograph of a Future Christchurch sign on a wire fence, in front of a demolition site.
Messages written on stones left in front of the cordon fence around the CTV Building site.
Weeds growing on the site of a demolished building. In the foreground is an abandoned shoe.
Messages written on stones left in front of the cordon fence around the CTV Building site.
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Aerial footage of a site in Avondale where several liquefaction remediation options are being tested. Gelignite explosives have been buried throughout the site. These will be set off to simulate liquefaction caused by an earthquake. The result, if successful, will help EQC protect people's houses from future earthquakes, and settle land claims. The video was recorded using a drone aircraft.