A building on Worcester Street where the brick side wall has collapsed, exposing the interior.
A building on Worcester Street where the brick side wall has collapsed, exposing the interior.
Damage to the Knox Church where bricks and building masonry have fallen from the church.
Bricks from the Cranmer Courts stacked onto wooden crates outside the building on Montreal Street.
Fallen gas cylinders behind a bar on The Strip. In the foreground are fallen bricks.
Damaged buildings on Tuam Street. The brick parapets have collapsed, falling onto the footpath below.
A damaged brick wall around a courtyard garden on Ash Street, seen from Madras Street.
A photograph of concrete blocks and steel beams reinforcing a brick building on Hereford Street.
A photograph of concrete blocks and steel beams reinforcing a brick building on Hereford Street.
Fallen bricks in the courtyard of Piko Wholefoods. The upper storey has been partially demolished.
A photograph of a pile of bricks from the demolished house at 116 Centaurus Road.
A photograph of a pile of bricks from the demolished house at 116 Centaurus Road.
A photograph of a pile of bricks from the demolished house at 116 Centaurus Road.
A photograph of a collapsed brick building. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "Heathcote".
A damaged building on Madras Street. The upper part of the brick wall has collapsed.
Wooden supports holding up the mud brick chimney of Deans Cottage, which is badly cracked.
Detail of a section of the brick wall on the Weston House which has crumbled.
A photograph of bricks from the Cranmer Centre. A frog stamp can just be seen.
Wooden supports holding up the mud brick chimney of Deans Cottage, which is badly cracked.
Bricks from the Cranmer Courts stacked onto wooden crates outside the building on Montreal Street.
Damage to the Knox Church where bricks and building masonry have fallen from the church.
View down Poplar Lane, where the brick building on the right has been fenced off.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a group of shops on the corner of Barbadoes Street and Edgeware Road. The second storey of the shops has collapsed, and the bricks have fallen to the footpath, taking the awnings with them. Police tape and road cones have been placed around the buildings as a cordon.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a group of shops on the corner of Barbadoes Street and Edgeware Road. The second storey of the shops has collapsed, and the bricks have fallen to the footpath, taking the awnings with them. Police tape and road cones have been placed around the buildings as a cordon.
Damage to the Lyttelton Hotel on Norwich Quay. The top of the building has crumbled, bringing the roof down with it. Bricks have fallen on the awning and all along the footpath. Wire fencing and road cones have been used to create a cordon around the building.
The A and T Burt building on Ferry Road in Woolston. Bricks from the top section of the building have fallen away. Signs advertising two businesses housed in the building, Superheat and Junk and Disorderly, can be seen sitting in front of it. The footpath is covered with brick dust and small pieces of masonry from when the larger pieces were cleared away.
Damage to Lyttelton following the 22 February 2011 earthquake. Ground Culinary Centre on the corner of London and Canterbury Streets. The wall on the top storey has crumbled into the street, covering the footpath in bricks. Large cracks can be seen above the door, coming out from the corners of the window.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to the Edward Gibbon building on Madras Street. Sections of the top storey have collapsed and the bricks have spilled onto the road in front, damaging the awning and smashing several cars. The message, 'Clear', has been spray-painted on the closest car.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to the Chinese Methodist Church on Papanui Road. The bricks at the top of the tower have crumbled, and the wooden bracing is hanging half off the building. The spire of the tower can be seen to the left where it was moved to following the 4 September 2010 earthquake.
A photograph of a residential property in the Christchurch central city with USAR codes spray-painted on the driveway and "No go" spray-painted on the front window and door. A red sticker in the window indicates that the building is unsafe to enter. Cordon tape has been draped around the side, cordoning off a pile of bricks.