Members of the public take photographs of the damaged Christ Church Cathedral. A walkway from Gloucester Street to the Square was opened up for a few days to allow the public a closer look at the cathedral.
A photograph of a sign in the Canterbury Quakes exhibition at the Canterbury Museum. The sign displays information about the 22 February 2011 earthquake.
UC Quake Centre Industry Leaders' Meeting in NZi3.
A view from the Cathedral Square tram stop towards Oxford Terrace. The Clarendon Towers building on the left has been damaged and its windows boarded up. A large crane can be seen in the background.
Members of the public take photographs of the damaged Christ Church Cathedral. A walkway from Gloucester Street to the Square was opened up for a few days to allow the public a closer look at the cathedral.
Members of the public walk past the damaged New Regent Street facades. The street has been cordoned off by security fences. The BNZ building on Armargh Street can be seen in the background.
An overgrown garden surrounds a damaged house.
A worker supervises the demoliton work on the Amuri Courts. Other workers and a digger can be seen in the background.
A close up of damaged stonework of Christ Church Cathedral. A window has been boarded up on the north side of the cathedral.
The front of Christ Church Cathedral. The upper part of the front wall has crumbled leaving the inside space exposed. Steel bracing has been placed against it to limit further damage. A walkway from Gloucester Street to the Square was opened up for a few days to allow the public a closer look at the cathedral.
A vacant lot left by the demolition of a building on Latimer Square. In the background is the Newstalk ZB building.
Damage down a residential street.
A close up of a crack running through the stonework of Christ Church Cathedral.
The public memorial service held at Hagley Park to mark the first anniversary of the 2011 Christchurch earthquake. Attached to the trees are notes with words of hope.
On the one year anniversary of the February 22nd, flowers were placed in road cones across Christchurch to remember the earthquake victims.
A photograph of a letter on display in the Canterbury Quakes exhibition at the Canterbury Museum. The letter was found in a time capsule in the plinth of the statue of John Robert Godley in Cathedral Square after the 22 February 2011 earthquake.
A photograph of the John Robert Godley statue on display in the Canterbury Quakes exhibition at the Canterbury Museum. The statue fell off its plinth in Cathedral Square during the 22 February 2011 earthquake, exposing two time capsules.
The road and footpath are covered in silt from liquefaction in a residential area. A portaloo stands at the front of the house.
A photograph of a meeting being held in the Central Library Peterborough.
A close up of a broken stained-glass window of Christ Church Cathedral.
Looking across the street towards the site where the CTV building stood.
View down Re:Start mall, an elephant grass sculpture presented by the Christchurch Garden City Trust and street lights with banners in the Canterbury colour, red and black.
Detail of a pile of rubble fallen from a building on the corner of Colombo and Brougham Streets.
A close up of a large crack in the former Government Life building in Cathedral Square.
Remediation work being carried out on a property. The front door entrance has been boarded up.
The site of the demolished St. John's Anglican Church on Latimer Square. On the left is the former site of the CTV building.
Looking down Park Terrace, to the right is Hagley park. Road cones and diggers can be seen in the background.
Detail of an overgrown property in a residential area.
A trailer of bricks in front of a house with damaged walls.
Earthquake damage to a house. A small section of the house is covered by black tarp to protect it from the rain.