A best practice traffic management guideline, produced in February 2014, which helps traffic management team members manage cyclists through road work sites safely.
A cyclist walks through the Re:Start mall.
A cyclist riding along the damaged Avonside Drive.
A motor-cyclist carries groceries in a backpack.
A photograph of a cyclist and car on the McCormacks Bay causeway.
A cyclist bikes along a damaged road, which has slumped towards the river.
The cycle-powered cinema equipment which captures the energy generated by the cyclist.
A crack in the footpath in Avonside with cones around it to warn pedestrians and cyclists.
Cycles set up on the cycle-powered cinema equipment which captures the energy generated by the cyclist.
The information board outside Gap Filler's cycle-powered cinema explaining how much energy a cyclist can generate.
A photograph of a cyclist in a high-vis vest, at the intersection of Manchester and Cashel Streets.
A woman inspecting a crack in the footpath in Avonside. Cones on either side warn pedestrians and cyclists of the uneven surface.
A woman inspecting a crack in the footpath in Avonside. Cones on either side warn pedestrians and cyclists of the uneven surface.
An image from a Navy Today April 2011 article titled, "Cordon Patrols in Lyttelton". In the image, members of the New Zealand Navy are speaking to a cyclist outside a cordon on London Street in Lyttelton.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "This manikin has been retrieved from the remains of the support from the Octagon Live tower. The body was from the cyclist and the head was from the kayaker. Oxford Terrace".
Sculptures of a kayaker, cyclist and bungee jumper decorating the steel bracing that has been placed on the front of the Worcester Street face of the Octagon Live Restaurant (formerly Trinity Church). Two of the figures are wearing santa hats.
The Octagon Live Restaurant (formerly Trinity Church) on Worcester Street. Bracing has been placed on the tower to limit further damage from aftershocks. Sculptures of a cyclist, bungee jumper , rock climber and kayaker can be seen on the bracing posts.
A PDF copy of an article written All Right? that features Sandy Turner - "educator, clown doctor, and road cone wearing cyclist". In the article, Turner reflects on the All Right? campaign as a source of acceptance, inspiration and enjoyment. The article appears on the website for the Mental Health Foundation of New Zealand.
A police officer talks to a cyclist at a cordon checkpoint near the Casino. An armoured vechicle is parked beside the cordon. The photographer comments, "The army are doing a fine job manning the cordon around the city centre. It must be pretty dull work and the weather isn't that flash at the moment. It's still surreal to see armed vehicles guarding entrances to the city though".