A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The IRD building viewed from Latimer Square".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Flowers left in tribute at the CTV site".
A photograph of the '185 Empty Chairs' memorial installation.
A photograph of the '185 Empty Chairs' memorial installation.
A photograph of the '185 Empty Chairs' memorial installation.
A photograph of the '185 Empty Chairs' memorial installation.
A photograph of the elevator shaft of the collapsed CTV Building. The shaft shows significant damage from fire.
A photograph of the '185 Empty Chairs' memorial installation.
A photograph of the '185 Empty Chairs' memorial installation.
Emergency personnel searching for people trapped in the collapsed Canterbury Television Building on Madras Street. Smoke can be seen rising from the ruins, which have been on fire.
Emergency personnel searching for people trapped in the collapsed Canterbury Television Building on Madras Street. Smoke can be seen rising from the ruins, which have been on fire.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Richard Loffhagen, owner of Simply Catering, stands on the old site on the corner of Madras Street and Salisbury Street where he wrote a message on the wall the day the old building was brought down".
A sign at the demolition site of the Oxford Terrace Baptist Church reading, "Our building is gone, the Church is fine!".
A banner listing the 115 people who died in the CTV building collapse.
A photograph of Andrew Just from F3 Design (left) and Martin Trusttum, CPIT Faculty of Creative Arts, giving a talk about ArtBox on the corner of St Asaph Street and Madras Street. The public talk was part of FESTA 2012.
St John's Ambulance staff conferring at the base of the collapsed Canterbury Television Building on Madras Street. Behind them, emergency personnel can be seen searching the ruins for trapped people.
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "This poem was pinned alongside the other floral tributes on the fence at the CTV site, on the corner of Cashel and Madras Streets".
A PDF copy of pages 12-13 of the book Christchurch: The Transitional City Pt IV. The pages document the transitional project 'Tati/Playtime'. Photos: Barnaby Bennett
Colour photograph dominated by a damaged Apex Car Rentals, with fallen bricks from exterior of the building on the footpath.
A photograph of snow covering the '185 Empty Chairs' memorial installation.
Emergency personnel searching the collapsed Canterbury Television on Madras Street building for trapped people in the aftermath of the 22 February 2011 earthquake. Smoke can be seen rising from the ruins.
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The site of the CTV Building on Madras Street where 118 people died. All that remains is the elevator shaft and stairwell to the right".
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.
A photograph of an installation view of Julia Holden's exhibition, 'its like now'. The installation was exhibited at the ArtBox gallery on the corner of Madras and St Asaph Streets.