A damaged brick building has wooden bracing holding the walls together. The photographer comments, "This building came through the September Christchurch quake with a few band aid plasters, but the February quake means that she is now DNR (Do Not Resuscitate)".
A close up of missing bricks from a building on Cashel Street.
Two people survey fallen bricks from a building in the city centre.
A cluster of bricks remain lodged between a pipe and wooden framework.
Damage to a house. Sections of the brick exterior walls have crumbled.
Damage to residential properties. In the background is a damaged brick property.
A trailer of bricks in front of a house with damaged walls.
A brick wall with flaked paint. The adjourning building has been demolished.
Scaffolding around Satchmo Hairdressing, where sections of the brick wall have crumbled.
Digitally manipulated image of graffiti on a brick building on St Asaph Street. The graffiti depicts a sticking plaster over a broken section of the wall, with the words "I'll kiss it better". The photographer comments, "After the 22 February 2011 earthquake in Christchurch band aid plasters starting to appear in different parts of the city on damaged buildings. A year later most can still be seen. This one was once a whole plaster, but it has slowly broken up where it crossed the gap. The red bricks seen to symbolise the terrible wounds caused to the City and it's people".
A digitally manipulated image of the word 'Lyttelton' made out of damaged bricks. The photographer comments, "This shows the courage and humour of the earthquake wrecked port of Lyttelton. There is lots of little things that make you smile that the locals and volunteers from around the area have created".
A photograph of a pile of bricks from the partially-demolished Cranmer Centre.
A photograph of a pile of bricks from the partially-demolished Cranmer Centre.
A photograph of a brick from the demolished house at 116 Centaurus Road.
A photograph of a brick from a demolished house at 272 Barbadoes Street.
A close-up photograph of bricks and building rubble outside the Cranmer Courts.
A photograph of a pile of bricks from St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
A photograph of bricks which have fallen from St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
A photograph of a brick from the demolished house at 116 Centaurus Road.
A photograph of a pile of bricks from the partially-demolished Cranmer Centre.
A damaged house, the outer brick wall of which has completely fallen away.
Holes in a brick building on Fitzgerald Avenue are marked with spray-painted numbers.
A photograph of a brick removed from Wood's Mill grain silo on Wise Street.
Detail of a building where the brick walls have crumbled, exposing the internal fixtures.
Bricks fallen from the parapet of a two-storey building in the central city.
Damage to a commercial building. The brick parapets have collapsed, crushing the awning below.
A pile of bricks lie in front of a shop doorway on Barbadoes Street.
A photograph of the frog mark in a brick from the Union Centre Building.
A man holds up a brick fallen from a building in the city centre.
A photograph of a dusty monitor in an earthquake-damaged building on Poplar Street taken during the Residential Access Project. The Residential Access Project gave residents temporary access within the red-zone cordon in order to retrieve items from their homes after the 22 February 2011 earthquake. Dislodged bricks can also be seen around the monitor.