A partly constructed tilt slab building on the demolition site of 338 Montreal Street. In the background, a severely damaged B&B can be seen.
Damage to the Croydon House B&B Hotel.
Damage to the Croydon House B&B Hotel.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to Charlie B's Backpackers on Madras Street. The front of the building has collapsed, the bricks and other rubble spilling onto the road and footpath in front. Many of the walls inside the top storey of the building are now hanging loose from the ceiling.
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 2 May 2011 entitled, "B is for broken...".
A partly constructed tilt slab building on the demolition site of 338 Montreal Street. In the background, a severely damaged B&B can be seen.
Critical infrastructure networks are highly relied on by society such that any disruption to service can have major social and economic implications. Furthermore, these networks are becoming increasingly dependent on each other for normal operation such that an outage or asset failure in one system can easily propagate and cascade across others resulting in widespread disruptions in terms of both magnitude and spatial reach. It is the vulnerability of these networks to disruptions and the corresponding complexities in recovery processes which provide direction to this research. This thesis comprises studies contributing to two areas (i) the modelling of national scale in-terdependent infrastructure systems undergoing major disruptions, and (ii) the tracking and quantification of infrastructure network recovery trajectories following major disruptions. Firstly, methods are presented for identifying nationally significant systemic vulnerabilities and incorporating expert knowledge into the quantification of infrastructure interdependency mod-elling and simulation. With application to the interdependent infrastructures networks across New Zealand, the magnitudes and spatial extents of disruption are investigated. Results high-light the importance in considering interdependencies when assessing disruptive risks and vul-nerabilities in disaster planning applications and prioritising investment decisions for enhancing resilience of national networks. Infrastructure dependencies are further studied in the context of recovery from major disruptions through the analysis of curves measuring network functionality over time. Continued studies into the properties of recovery curves across a database of global natural disasters produce statistical models for predicting the trajectory and expected recovery times. Finally, the use of connectivity based metrics for quantifying infrastructure system functionality during recovery are considered with a case study application to the Christchurch Earthquake (February 22, 2011) wastewater network response
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in July 2016.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in October 2016.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "24B Waygreen Avenue".
A story submitted by H.B. to the QuakeStories website.
A story submitted by Mrs B. to the QuakeStories website.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "167 (remaining) and 167B (demolished) Victoria Street".
A photograph of an overgrown residential property at 93B Courtenay Drive in Kaiapoi.
A significant portion of economic loss from the Canterbury Earthquake sequence in 2010-2011 was attributed to losses to residential buildings. These accounted for approximately $12B of a total $40B economic losses (Horspool, 2016). While a significant amount of research effort has since been aimed at research in the commercial sector, little has been done to reduce the vulnerability of the residential building stock.
Colour photograph of front door to the Occidental Hotel, which after the September quake had suffered vandalism. The name "B. Perry" was still above the door.
Empty sections where houses once stood at 24B Waygreen Avenue in New Brighton. The sections are muddy and overgrown with weeds.
Empty sections where houses once stood at 24A and 24B Waygreen Avenue in New Brighton. The sections are overgrown with weeds.
A photograph of an overgrown property. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "24B Waygreen Avenue".
The obligatory earthquake damage shot. Taken on Ilford Pan F+ with a Yashica-Mat 124G, developed in ID-11 for 8.5 minutes, printed on Ilford Multigrade IV RC, print developed in Ilford Universal PQ.
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The driveway of 112B and 112C Bexley Road in New Brighton".
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in December 2012.
A photograph of a driveway in New Brighton, captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "112A, 112B, 112C Bexley Road".
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in November 2012.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in October 2013
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in September 2014.
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A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in June 2014.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in November 2016.
A PDF copy of a newsletter sent by All Right? to their mailing list in April 2017.