A machine pumping sewage into the Avon River on Avonside Drive.
Extensive repairs being made to the sewerage infrastructure on Avonside Drive.
Extensive repairs being made to the sewerage infrastructure on Avonside Drive.
Cracks along the driveway and lawn of a property on Avonside Drive.
A photograph of St Paul's Church on Gayhurst Road.
Contractors work to complete the relay of a sewerage line in Burwood.
One of many notices along Christchurch waterways, reading "Polluted water, please avoid contact, Christchurch City Council".
A large crack running through the driveway and lawn of a property on Avonside Drive.
A crack in the footpath in Avonside with cones around it to warn pedestrians and cyclists.
Three men digging silt out of storm water drains in Burwood.
A sign on Morris Street off Avonside Drive clipped to wire fencing on the road. The sign reads "Non-residents are asked not to enter this area. Traffic may cause further damage to roads and properties. Please respect the needs of local residents".
A photograph of road signs and a cone on Avonside Drive. One sign indicates that the speed limit in the area is temporarily 30 km/h. The other states that there is "No through route. Access to properties only".
A damaged road island on Avonside Drive. Paving stones have been removed and stacked on the island. A road cone sits at the end.
Members of the Avonside Community walk down a road in Avonside. Silt from liquefaction has been cleared from people's properties and placed on the street in piles. Workers in the distance are collecting the silt to take to Bottle Lake.
The north end of the Gayhurst Road bridge, cracked down the side, the posts bent inwards and the road buckled. Tape has been woven across the bridge.
Cracking along the bottom of a house in Avonside Drive. The house has lifted a few centimetres off its foundations.
Damage to a house in Richmond. A brick chimney has visibly twisted and there are gaps between the bricks. The photographer comments, "One chimney is damaged but still standing - for now. (It was taken down on the morning of Day 2, just as well)".
A photograph of large cracks in the pavement in front of St Paul's School in Dallington.
A photograph of a large crack in the garden beds of a house on Glenarm Terrace in Dallington.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a brick wall at the entrance to a property on Gayhurst Road.
A photograph of a portaloo on the side of Gayhurst Road near St Paul's Church.
Avonside Drive, looking up Rodson Avenue. A pile of gravel can be seen, as well as road cones, Port-a-loos and fencing.
A woman inspecting a crack in the footpath in Avonside. Cones on either side warn pedestrians and cyclists of the uneven surface.
A photograph of displaced bricks in one of the walls of St Paul's School on Gayhurst Road.
A police officer and two soldiers inspects a property on Avonside Drive. The awning above the door has collapsed, taking some of the brick wall with it. It still lies on the front steps of the house.
A hole in the side of the road along Avonside Drive. A blue pipe can be seen inside the hole. Pipes like this were used to provide temporary water supplies to the neighbourhood while the water system was being repaired.
A broken driveway on Avonside Drive. The concrete slabs on the driveway have lifted during the earthquake, creating a large crack in the driveway. The crack has been filled with tiles and wood but the rubbish bins have still fallen in.
A private pool on a property on Avonside Drive. The pool has lifted out of its casing and now looks like an above ground pool.
Pomeroy's Brewery Inn on Kilmore Street viewed across the Avon River. The bar is green stickered meaning it safe to enter. As a brick building in this condition is fairly rare.
A crack next to the Avon River caused by the ground slumping after the 4 September earthquake. A blue pipe has been laid over the crack. Many kilometres of these temporary water pipes have been run overground in Avonside to supply houses with water.