Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photos of damage in Waimakariri River Regional Park, taken by David Owen.
Photo inside of Level 2 of Pegasus Building taken by Angela Dean, 9 June 2011.
Photo of damage to John Glennie's office on Aoraki 4th Floor, taken by Natasha Sitarz.
Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photo of the demolition of Aoraki Building taken by John Glennie, 14th of January 2012.
Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photo of damage in Twin Lakes, taken by John Dore, 7 September 2010.
Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photo of damage in Kaiapoi, taken by Compliance Enforcement, 9 September 2010.
Photo of damage in Kaiapoi, taken by Compliance Enforcement, 10 September 2010.
Photo of damage to Ruth Littlewood's office on Aoraki 4th Floor, taken by Natasha Sitarz.
Photo inside of Reception of Ground Floor of Pegasus Building taken by Angela Dean, 9 June 2011.
Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photo of damage in Halswell & Tai Tapu, taken by Dan Harrison, 9 September 2010.
Photo of damage in Canterbury, taken by John Weeber.
Photo of damage of Aoraki Building taken by Marcus Langman, 10 March 2011.
Photo inside the cafeteria of Level 1 of Pegasus Building taken by Angela Dean, 9 June 2011.
Photo of damage in Kaiapoi, taken by Brian McIndoe, 6 September 2010.
Photo of damage in Kaiapoi, taken by Compliance Enforcement, 9 September 2010.
Photo of damage of Aoraki Building taken by Marcus Langman, 10 March 2011.
Photo inside of Level 2 of Pegasus Building taken by Angela Dean, 5 January 2011.
Photo inside of Level 3 of Pegasus Building taken by Paul Gofton, 6 September 2010.
Object Overview of 'Christchurch liquefaction study – Stage II (Beca, 2002).'
A photograph of a sign from the Christchurch City Council, ECan and the Canterbury District Health Board warning people over the contamination in the rivers after the September earthquake. The sign reads, "Warning, contaminated water. Due to sewage overflows this water is unsafe for human contact and activity and is a Public Health Risk. Please keep all people and pets out of contact with the water and do not consume any seafood or shellfish collected from this area". In the background, workers from Treetech clean up wood and leaves from felled trees.
A video of a presentation by Jane Murray and Stephen Timms during the Social Recovery Stream of the 2016 People in Disasters Conference. The presentation is titled, "Land Use Recovery Plan: How an impact assessment process engaged communities in recovery planning".The abstract for this presentation reads as follows: In response to the Canterbury earthquakes, the Minister for Canterbury Earthquake Recovery directed Environment Canterbury (Canterbury's regional council) to prepare a Land Use Recovery Plan that would provide a spatial planning framework for Greater Christchurch and aid recovery from the Canterbury earthquakes. The Land Use Recovery Plan sets a policy and planning framework necessary to rebuild existing communities and develop new communities. As part of preparing the plan, an integrated assessment was undertaken to address wellbeing and sustainability concerns. This ensured that social impacts of the plan were likely to achieve better outcomes for communities. The process enabled a wide range of community and sector stakeholders to provide input at the very early stages of drafting the document. The integrated assessment considered the treatment of major land use issues in the plan, e.g. overall distribution of activities across the city, integrated transport routes, housing typography, social housing, employment and urban design, all of which have a key impact on health and wellbeing. Representatives from the Canterbury Health in All Policies Partnership were involved in designing a three-part assessment process that would provide a framework for the Land Use Recovery Plan writers to assess and improve the plan in terms of wellbeing and sustainability concerns. The detail of these assessment stages, and the influence that they had on the draft plan, will be outlined in the presentation. In summary, the three stages involved: developing key wellbeing and sustainability concerns that could form a set of criteria, analysing the preliminary draft of the Land Use Recovery Plan against the criteria in a broad sector workshop, and analysing the content and recommendations of the Draft Plan. This demonstrates the importance of integrated assessment influencing the Land Use Recovery Plan that in turn influences other key planning documents such as the District Plan. This process enabled a very complex document with wide-ranging implications to be broken down, enabling many groups, individuals and organisations to have their say in the recovery process. There is also a range of important lessons for recovery that can be applied to other projects and actions in a disaster recovery situation.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Engineers from ECAN and other areas in New Zealand have been inspecting the Waimakariri River stop banks on the coast side of State Highway 1 after the September earthquake. Large cracks along the stop bank".
A member of ECan briefing members of Civil Defence in the Christchurch Art Gallery a few hours after the 22 February 2011 earthquake. The Christchurch Art Gallery served as the headquarters for Civil Defence after the 22 February 2011 earthquake.