A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "All that remains of the former convent at 23 Exeter Street in Lyttelton".
Pieces of decorative stonework that have been arranged on the floor of the Durham Street Methodist Church.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Eight of these small bolts were all that held up the heavy roof bridging two buildings".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "View of the piece of Oxford Terrace that includes Brannigans".
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Small coloured huts in the Botanic Gardens that contained fascinating flower arrangements".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Glass that fell from the Brannigan's Building, finally swept up".
A man reciting poetry at a poetry reading that was held at Gap Filler's first project at 832 Colombo Street.
A photograph of a sign on a cordon fence announcing that the Latin Addiction Dance Studio is open at 166 St Asaph Street.
A photograph of empty sections that have been fenced off near the corner of Tuam Street and High Street.
The crowd at the Band Together concert, a concert that was put on at Hagley Park for the people of Canterbury following the September earthquake.
The crowd at the Band Together concert, a concert that was put on at Hagley Park for the people of Canterbury following the September earthquake.
A photograph of a sign on a cordon fence announcing that the Latin Addiction Dance Studio is open at 166 St Asaph Street.
A man reciting poetry at a poetry reading that was held at Gap Filler's first project at 832 Colombo Street.
A photograph of a cannon and other large objects that are being stored at the Canterbury Cultural Recovery Centre.
Mike Hewson's installation "Deconstruction" on the walkway between Ballantynes and The Crossing gives the illusion that the walkway has been removed.
A digital photograph in PDF format with caption. Image taken within the Horseshoe Lake Red Zone, of a home that is being prepared for relocation.
A construction site on Wakefield Avenue in Sumner that has been red-stickered due to rock fall danger from the cliff behind it.
A photograph of the remains of a liquefaction blister that has been flattened with a rotary hoe on a farm near River Road in Lincoln.
The crowd at the Band Together concert, a concert that was put on at Hagley Park for the people of Canterbury following the September earthquake.
A diagram which shows outputs from SCIRT's March 2012 capability survey, detailing the number and type of positions that needed to be filled.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "All that's left of the Durham Street Methodist Church".
The crowd at the Band Together concert, a concert that was put on at Hagley Park for the people of Canterbury following the September earthquake.
The brick fence that surrounds the Mona Vale Homestead. A section of the brickwork has collapsed onto the driveway.
A photograph of a crack that runs between two windows of the earthquake-damaged Wheki Building at the University of Canterbury.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "This damaged container is near the tree stumps of trees that had to be removed from Hagley Park".
A construction site on Wakefield Avenue in Sumner that has been red-stickered due to rock fall danger from the cliff behind it.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "This dead bouquet is a poignant reminder of the lives that were lost".
A video of Di's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project. Please note that the video quality is corrupted throughout this file.
To identify key ground characteristics that led to different liquefaction manifestations during the Canterbury earthquakes
A scanned copy of a photograph of the garden of Di Madgin's former home in the Red Zone, taken before the earthquakes. She describes the scene in the photograph as, "This is the courtyard that we made, to have an eating place at the back of the house. The tree in the neighbours' was a tree that Pete's brother stole on a school trip up in the mountains from a national park. They planted this red beech in the garden. It became the neighbourhood bird tree and the sound was fantastic in the evenings."