A page banner for a feature on visions for Christchurch.
A promotion for an interactive online tool for finding new subdivisions.
A timeline for the consultation process for the draft Central City Plan.
Sign for the Parkside Meeting Room, temporary office for the Student Mentoring service.
Blocks made for quilts to be made for those affected by earthquake in Christchurch
The front page graphic for The Press. The main headline reads, 'A year for heroes'.
A graphic for an article about ideas for the red zone.
A front page graphic for The Press. The main headline reads, "Grief is the price we pay for love".
The front page graphic for the Mainlander section of The Press, featuring an article about journalists' visions for Christchurch.
A graphic for a Zone Life feature, encouraging readers to contribute their ideas for the red zone.
A graphic for a Zone Life feature, encouraging readers to contribute their ideas for the red zone.
A graphic for a Zone Life feature, encouraging readers to contribute their ideas for the red zone.
A graphic for a Zone Life feature, encouraging readers to contribute ideas for the red zone.
The contents page for the Your Weekend section of The Press, featuring an editorial hoping for an end to aftershocks.
A buskers village was set up in Hagley Park for the first time in 2012 for the World Buskers Festival.
A buskers village was set up in Hagley Park for the first time in 2012 for the World Buskers Festival.
An advertisement for 'The Pledge for Canterbury' campaign advising that The Pledge can be signed at Northlands Shopping Centre.
Pick up/drop off sign for a shuttle bus stop on campus, taking students from the Ilam Campus to Dovedale for their classes.
This statue of the Virgin Mary stood in the south tower of The Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament and had been facing inside from when she was placed there and through the September 2010 earthquake. That changed on February 22 2010 at 12.51pm when Christchurch was rocked by a 6.3 magnitude earthquake. During the violent shaking motion Mary was t...
A crowd gathered in Cranmer Square for the Rally for the Cathedral protest. The rally protested the proposed demolition of the ChristChurch Cathedral.
A crowd gathered in Cranmer Square for the Rally for the Cathedral protest. The rally protested the proposed demolition of the ChristChurch Cathedral.
A crowd gathered in Cranmer Square for the Rally for the Cathedral protest. The rally protested the proposed demolition of the ChristChurch Cathedral.
A graphic for an article on a proposed development for the former railway station site on Moorhouse Avenue.
A page banner for the front page of the Nelson Mail, showing the seismograph trace for the 3 July 2012 Opunake earthquake.
The tower on the Great Hall at the Arts Centre has recently been lowered to the ground for safety - and decorated for Christmas. It must be the most unusual Christmas tree ever.
My new photographic book about the Christchurch Earthquakes is hot off the presses at Blurb!
Take a sneak peek... View my book at Blurb:
www.blurb.com/bookstore/invited/2315509/c1c27e503cee584ca...
An advertisement for 'The Big Quake', a book about the 4 September earthquake produced by The Press. The advertisement advises the expected delivery date for a reprinted edition.
A new gateway into Christchurch is named 'Highway to hell'. Context: describes the way many Christchurch people feel about their city after the earthquakes of 2010 and 2011. There is a high level of frustration and feelings of helplessness brought about by uncertainty about the future because of building and insurance problems.
Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Text reads 'Uses for Christchurch rubble?...' The cartoon shows a bridge made partially of earthquake rubble leading from Lyttelton Harbour to Diamond Harbour on Banks Peninsula. Someone in a van says 'At long last... A bridge to Diamond Harbour!' And someone else says 'And somewhere to fish!' Context - Rubble from the earthquake may be used for the construction of watersides and bridges. This cartoon is a fanciful use for Christchurch earthquake rubble. Currently a ferry connects Diamond Harbour to Lyttelton, on the harbour's northern shore. In combination with buses from Lyttelton to downtown Christchurch, this allows residents of Diamond Bay to commute to the city.
Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Gold Awards recipients, Jonas Bergler, team leader for SVA online operations. Pictured here with Vice-Chancellor Dr Rod Carr, Prime Minister John Key and Minister for Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Gerry Brownlee.