A digital copy of a pen and ink and watercolour painting by Raymond Morris, titled, '178 Manchester Street, Hillary and Marshall Building'.
Photo inside of Level 1 of Pegasus Building taken by Angela Dean, 9 June 2011.
A damaged building at 10 Bedford Row with 128 Manchester Street to the right. Both Buildings have damaged east walls on their eastern side.
Photo inside of Level 2 of Pegasus Building taken by Angela Dean, 10 June 2011.
Heavy steel bracing holding up the front facade of the Our City O-Tautahi Building on Worcester Street near Oxford Terrace.
Photo inside Level 3 of Pegasus Building taken by James Thompson, 5 September 2010.
A photograph of damaged buildings on Hereford Street. Cracks can be seen in the building on the far left and the windows have been boarded up with plywood.
A photograph of the Cotter & Co. building behind wire fencing on High Street. The building formerly housed The National Gallery and New Zealand Tattoo.
Damage to buildings down Victoria Street. Members of the public have walked inside the police tape cordon to have a look at the damaged buildings and bricks across the road.
A photograph of workers spraying down a building that is being demolished. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "753-757 Colombo Street".
A photograph of the Cotter & Co. building on High Street, taken from Tuam Street. The building formerly housed The National Gallery and New Zealand Tattoo.
Photo inside Level 3 of Pegasus Building taken by James Thompson, 5 September 2010.
Photo inside Level 3 of Pegasus Building taken by James Thompson, 5 September 2010.
A photograph of earthquake-damaged buildings on Manchester Street. Missing brick work and cracks can be seen at the top of the of Dick Smith building.
The partially-demolished Henry Africa's building. The photographer comments, "A building housing a restaurant and a great little neighbourhood bar is finally coming down because of earthquake damage. The doorway still stands".
Photo inside Level 3 of Pegasus Building taken by James Thompson, 5 September 2010.
University of Canterbury library staff in their temporary office in the NZi3 building. The photographer comments, "University of Canterbury administration all fits into one building! Library IT department staff".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Seamen's Building in Norwich Quay, Lyttleton, after the damaged top story has been removed".
A wooden fence has been spray painted after the building was cleared by a USAR team. This system was used following the February earthquake to mark buildings that have been checked.
The partially-demolished Henry Africa's building. The photographer comments, "A building housing a restaurant and a great little neighbourhood bar is finally coming down because of earthquake damage. A landmark vanishes".
Photo inside of Level 3 of Aoraki Building taken by Susannah Black, 10 March 2011.
The partially-demolished Henry Africa's building. The photographer comments, "A building housing a restaurant and a great little neighbourhood bar is finally coming down because of earthquake damage. Half way gone".
A banner listing the 18 people who died in the PGC building collapse.
A window has been spray painted after the building was cleared by a USAR team. This system was used following the February earthquake to mark buildings that have been checked.
Damage to properties on Peterborough Street. The wall on a house has crumpled revealing the inside of the building. Fencing has been placed along the footpath to contain the building rubble.
Detail of spray painted codes left after a building was cleared by a USAR team. This system was used following the February earthquake to mark buildings that have been checked.
A fence has been spray painted after the building was cleared by a USAR team. This system was used following the February earthquake to mark buildings that have been checked.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 17 May 2011.
A PDF copy of The Star newspaper, published on Friday 6 July 2012.
Page 5 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 11 March 2011.