Bexley 2
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
Caption reads: "No one is doing anything with their gardens now. There’s no point."
Caption reads: "No one is doing anything with their gardens now. There’s no point."
A digital photograph in PDF format with caption, looking at an empty lot in the Horseshoe Lake area.
A digital photograph in PDF form with caption. Taken from Kingsford St, looking East at 'the Gingerbread house' in Horseshoe Lake.
A digital photograph in PDF format with caption. A Horseshoe Lake resident emptying chemical toilet into waste tank that sits on the side of the road (Kingsford St).
A digital photograph in PDF format with caption. Image taken from within a Red Zoned home on Kingsford st. Residents still living here and have written poems on the walls of the lounge.
A digital photograph in PDF format with caption, of a Red Zoned home being demolished on Kingsford street. Photo looking North West.
Caption reads: "I lived in London all through the Blitz, you get used to these things. Living here after the earthquakes didn’t bother me. I had a small battery operated radio and the neighbour lent me her generator. Initially I used it to run the fridge but after a while I couldn’t get it started. I don’t want to move, to be quite honest. There’s nothing that will be able to replace the life I built here."
Caption reads: "We all wish we could stay here. We want them to repair our homes, but they say they won't and you know nothing will change their minds."
Caption reads: "Bexley was a hidden gem. A diamond in the rough. It was a paradise, a place where you could hear the sea and smell the salt."
Caption reads: "We were meant to live here all our lives, our working life, our retirement. That’s no longer possible."
Caption reads: "We wanted a home where we could retire and live the rest of our lives."
A document created to summarise the initial SCIRT and New Zealand Red Cross collaboration workshop.
A runsheet created for the initial SCIRT and New Zealand Red Cross collaboration workshop.
A document which outlines how SCIRT and the New Zealand Red Cross worked together to aid the recovery of Christchurch.
A pdf copy of a presentation which SCIRT presented to Red Cross volunteers, telling them about what SCIRT is and what it does.
A memorandum which summarises the outcomes of the SCIRT/New Zealand Red Cross introductory session and the design thinking workshop.
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 2 May 2011 entitled, "B is for broken...".
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 23 June 2011 entitled, "Living in the red zone...".
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 20 September 2012 entitled, "A few snapshots of the residential red-zone....".
A document which summarises the outcomes of the SCIRT/New Zealand Red Cross Datasync project collaboration.
A document containing the flipcharts from the SCIRT and the New Zealand Red Cross design thinking workshop.
A pdf copy of a presentation delivered by Elizabeth McNaughton and Duncan Gibb at the SCIRT and New Zealand Red Cross humaneers action learning group.
A flyer which was attached to an email inviting people to the Humaneers action learning group.
A runsheet created for the SCIRT and New Zealand Red Cross humaneers action learning group.
A PDF of the design brief for the Whole House Reuse Project.
A PDF of the entire Whole House Reuse Catalogue of Resources.
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 5 January 2012 entitled, "A quilt for Jeremy and Eva".
A PDF copy of two designs for banners that were used at a New Zealand Red Cross event. One banner has the All Right? logo, while the other reads, "It's all right if you're feeling over it, stoked, lucky, on edge, or over-whelmed today".
A PDF copy of four postcards created in collaboration with New Zealand Red Cross. The front of each postcard is an image depicting one of the Five Ways to Wellbeing. On the reverse is list of six wellbeing tips by Dr Rob Gordon and the contact details for the Canterbury Support Line.
A PDF copy of nine postcards created in collaboration with New Zealand Red Cross. The front of each postcard is an image depicting one of the Five Ways to Wellbeing. On the reverse is list of six wellbeing tips by Dr Rob Gordon and the contact details for the Canterbury Support Line.