A volunteer on top of one of the Pallet Pavilion walls during construction. Scaffolding has been constructed around the wall out of wood.
Wayne Youle on a cherry picker, painting his mural, 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour'.
A house and spanners painted on Wayne Youle's mural, 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour'.
Volunteers working on a vacant site on St Asaph Street. An outdoor cinema and temporary architecture project is being built here.
High School students cleaning up a site on Gloucester Street. This is where the Re-Entry concert is going to be held.
CPIT students step back to admire the 'bowling' sign they have made out of plastic cups on wire fencing.
Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, meeting the members of Greening the Rubble at the site of the "Dance-O-Mat" on Oxford Terrace.
A teacher talks to a group of students from Rangi Ruru on the demolished site of the Crowne Plaza Hotel.
Members of the Student Volunteer Army photographed in front of Wayne Youle's mural where they have been pulling up weeds.
The exposed wall of a building on Peterborough Street with street art and advertisements for The Flying Cup, a mobile cafe.
High School students cleaning up a site on Gloucester Street. This is where the Re-Entry concert is going to be held.
Members of the Student Volunteer Army photographed in front of Wayne Youle's mural where they have been pulling up weeds.
The project report for Poetica, part of Gap Filler project 20, Walls. Poetica was an urban poetry project in which an interactive poetry installation was painted on the wall of 614 Colombo Street. The purpose of the project was to visualise the regeneration of Christchurch as an unwritten poem by allowing members of the public to writing poetry on the Poetica wall.
Two men and a crane laying slabs of concrete on the site of the Pallet Pavilion. These will serve as a floor for the structure.
Two men and a crane laying slabs of concrete on the site of the Pallet Pavilion. These will serve as a floor for the structure.
The empty site of the Crowne Plaza Hotel, now demolished. Wire fencing surrounds the property. This is where the Pallet Pavilion is to be built.
Two men and a crane laying slabs of concrete on the site of the Pallet Pavilion. These will serve as a floor for the structure.
Two men and a crane laying slabs of concrete on the site of the Pallet Pavilion. These will serve as a floor for the structure.
Volunteers in hard hats and high-visibility vests, lifting a pallet up to place on steel rods during the construction of the Pallet Pavilion.
Volunteers in hard hats and high-visibility vests, lifting a pallet up to place on steel rods during the construction of the Pallet Pavilion.
Volunteers in hard hats and high-visibility vests, lifting a pallet up to place on steel rods during the construction of the Pallet Pavilion.
Members of the community at the opening of Wayne Youle's mural, 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour'.
Members of the community at the opening of Wayne Youle's mural, 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour'.
Members of the community at the opening of Wayne Youle's mural, 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour'.
A photograph of bicycles mounted in generator stands at Gap Filler's cycle-powered cinema. Cyclists are pedalling the bicycles to provide power for the cinema.
A photograph of people arriving at the site of Gap Filler's cycle-powered cinema. In the foreground, a sign advertises the films to be shown.
A photograph of bricks stacked to spell out the word 'Lyttelton'. Behind the letters, plant pots have been laid out to form a temporary garden.
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.
Volunteers photographed around one of Gap Filler's painted pianos. The piano has been set up at the demolished site of the Crowne Plaza Hotel. A wooden structure has been built around the piano with Perspex and corrugated iron on top and plastic sheeting to the left and right. This is to protect the piano and pianist from wind and rain.
A video of Gap Filler setting up for the opening of the Dance-O-Mat's second location at 124 Oxford Terrace.