A photograph of toppled scaffolding outside a block of buildings on Manchester Street. In the background an excavator is sitting on top of a pile of rubble while it demolishes one of the buildings.
A view across Worcester Street to a building housing Stunning Buns Italian Cafe and Bar. The building has been cordoned off by a security fence and several of its windows are broken.
The partially-demolished Henry Africa's building. The photographer comments, "A building housing a restaurant and a great little neighbourhood bar is finally coming down because of earthquake damage. Fenced off for safety. People who regularly use Stanmore Rd will be happy when the demolition is complete".
Stone walls have collapsed on the Cranmer Courts building, exposing the rooms within. Building jacks hold up the corner of an upper room, preventing its further collapse. The photographer comments, "A bike ride around the CBD. Cranmer Courts, Montreal St".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Demolition site of Allan McLean building, corner of Colombo Street and Oxford Terrace".
Page 6 of Section C of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 25 June 2011.
Page 2 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 30 August 2011.
Page 4 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 15 March 2011.
Page 1 of Section A of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 15 October 2011.
Page 3 of Section C of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 10 September 2011.
Page 4 of Section C of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 10 September 2011.
Page 11 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Monday 28 February 2011.
Currently there is a worldwide renaissance in timber building design. At the University of Canterbury, new structural systems for commercial multistorey timber buildings have been under development since 2005. These systems incorporate large timber sections connected by high strength post-tensioning tendons, and timber-concrete composite floor systems, and aim to compete with existing structural systems in terms of cost, constructability, operational and seismic performance. The development of post-tensioned timber systems has created a need for improved lateral force design approaches for timber buildings. Current code provisions for seismic design are based on the strength of the structure, and do not adequately account for its deformation. Because timber buildings are often governed by deflection, rather than strength, this can lead to the exceedence of design displacement limitations imposed by New Zealand codes. Therefore, accurate modeling approaches which define both the strength and deformation of post-tensioned timber buildings are required. Furthermore, experimental testing is required to verify the accuracy of these models. This thesis focuses on the development and experimental verification of modeling approaches for the lateral force design of post-tensioned timber frame and wall buildings. The experimentation consisted of uni-direcitonal and bi-directional quasi-static earthquake simulation on a two-thirds scale, two-storey post-tensioned timber frame and wall building with timber-concrete composite floors. The building was subjected to lateral drifts of up to 3% and demonstrated excellent seismic performance, exhibiting little damage. The building was instrumented and analyzed, providing data for the calibration of analytical and numerical models. Analytical and numerical models were developed for frame, wall and floor systems that account for significant deformation components. The models predicted the strength of the structural systems for a given design performance level. The static responses predicted by the models were compared with both experimental data and finite element models to evaluate their accuracy. The frame, wall and floor models were then incorporated into an existing lateral force design procedure known as displacement-based design and used to design several frame and wall structural systems. Predictions of key engineering demand parameters, such as displacement, drift, interstorey shear, interstorey moment and floor accelerations, were compared with the results of dynamic time-history analysis. It was concluded that the numerical and analytical models, presented in this thesis, are a sound basis for determining the lateral response of post-tensioned timber buildings. However, future research is required to further verify and improve these prediction models.
Penguins Quakey and Shakey inside the NZI3 building.
Members of the recovery team outside the Registry Building.
Staff in the engineering building begin to clean up.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Damaged building, Oxford Street, Lyttelton".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Damaged building, Norwich Quay, Lyttelton".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Strategy Design building partially demolished".
Anna Crighton, Chairperson, Canterbury Earthquake Heritage Building Trust Board.
Damaged and partially-demolished brick buildings on Bedford Row.
A photograph of earthquake-damaged buildings in Cashel Mall.
A photograph of a damaged building on Oxford Terrace.
A photograph of badly-damaged buildings along Colombo Street.
A photograph of a damaged building on Tuam Street.
A photograph of a damaged building on Gloucester Street.
A photograph of the ACC building on Oxford Terrace.
A collapsed chimney on a building on Kilmore Street.
Rubble from a collapsed building in High Street Mall.
Damaged and partially-demolished brick buildings on Bedford Row.