Members of the audience at Gap Filler's "Film in the Gap!" project in Beckenham. Gap Filler has decorated the site with bunting, fairy lights and a fence made from old metal bed heads.
Neckties and earrings for sale at Gap Filler's Fun Fair in Addington.
Members of the public at Gap Filler's Fun Fair in Addington.
Children and adults line up for races at Gap Filler's Fun Fair. Coralie Winn, director of Gap Filler acts as a commentator to the race.
A man helping a child in the egg race at Gap Filler's Fun Fair in Addington.
A sign made out of plastic cups on wire fencing. The sign reads, "Gap Filler bowling". It was created by students from the CPIT who built a 1950s style bowling alley on this site.
Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.
CPIT students step back to admire the 'bowling' sign they have made out of plastic cups on wire fencing.
Volunteers constructing the benches and petanque pitch at the Lyttelton Petanque Club.
Volunteers constructing the petanque pitch at the Lyttelton Petanque Club.
Wintering, a folk collaboration from Wellington, performing at the Gap Filler Community Chess Board.
The finished 10m2 office building, now the Gap Filler Headquarters, with the Coffee Zone shack in the background.
Volunteers hammer boards to the outside of the 10 square metre office building, soon to be Gap Filler Headquarters in Sydenham.
A snow woman outside Gap Filler Headquarters, the 10 square metre office building in Sydenham. In the background a mural can be seen, reading, "The things which I have seen I now can see no more".
A snow woman outside Gap Filler Headquarters, the 10 square metre office building in Sydenham. In the background a mural can be seen, reading, "The things which I have seen I now can see no more".
Members of Gap Filler and volunteers posing for a photograph in front of the half complete 10m2 office building in Sydenham.
Volunteers help Gap Filler clear a vacant building site of weeds. This is where Gap Filler's Playtime project will be constructed, a temporary cinema called 'The Night Club'.
Volunteers help Gap Filler clear a vacant building site of weeds. This is where Gap Filler's Playtime project will be constructed, a temporary cinema called 'The Night Club'.
A poetry reading at Poetica and Gap Filler's "Instant Poetry" installation on Colombo Street.
A poetry reading at Poetica and Gap Filler's "Instant Poetry" installation on Colombo Street.
The exposed wall of a building on Peterborough Street with an almost-finished mural. This was a joint project between Gap Filler and The Flying Cup Cafe.
A mural on the exposed wall of a building on Peterborough Street. This was a joint project between Gap Filler and the Flying Cup Cafe. The mural is a beach scene with a quote from Anne Frank, reading, "Isn't it wonderful that nobody need waste a single moment to improve the world", and incorporates pre-existing street art and posters.
A poetry reading at Poetica and Gap Filler's "Instant Poetry" installation on Colombo Street.
Actor Tony Robinson at the "I hope Christchurch will..." blackboard, a mural on the corner of Colombo and Tuam Streets. Members of the public were invited to fill in the gaps with what they would like to see in the rebuilt city. Messages can be seen, such as, "I want sun!", "Embrace the new", "Retain its unique character", "Rise, and rise, and rise", "Rebuild to be better and stronger than before!" and "Environmentally friendly".
A poetry reading at Poetica and Gap Filler's "Instant Poetry" installation on Colombo Street.
Volunteers at Gap Filler and Poetica's "Instant Poetry" installation on Colombo Street.
A poem written on Gap Filler and Poetica's "Instant Poetry" wall on Colombo Street. The poem reads, "Amidst the shards of glass and twisted steel, beside the fallen brick and scattered concrete, we began to understand that there is beauty in the broken. Strangers do not live here anymore". This poem was picked by the public as the favourite poem written on the wall. It was then painted permanently onto the mural.
The Poet Tree", a Japanese-inspired poetry project on the corner of Liverpool and Cashel Streets. A poem by Matsuo Basho has been hand-written and displayed on a bamboo wall. Below is a bench dedicated to Japanese poet Matsuo Basho and a garden with corrugated iron flowers.
Volunteers painting the "Instant Poetry" wall on Colombo Street.
A volunteer working on Poetica and Gap Filler's "Instant Poetry" installation on Colombo Street.