Part of the parapet fell off from this Burger King outlet on Bealey Ave during the magnitude 7.1 earthquake that struck Christchurch on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Shows you how much shifting there was.
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Christchurch Earthquake 4th Sept 2010
Christchurch Sept 4th Earthquake
Christchurch Sept 4th Earthquake
Christchurch Earthquake 4th Sept 2010. Old Para Rubber building - Manchester St (between Tuam and St Asaph)
Can't believe how much of this rock fell off! Its looks totally different - no longer a castle. Sad but very glad that the huge rock did not hit anything on the way down!
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sorry not a good photo but this is a quick trip to the supermarket 3 days after the earthquake in Christchurch
Christchurch Sept 4th Earthquake
Christchurch Earthquake 4th Sept 2010
Very sad - was a nice looking building. These cracks are right through the bricks on several of the main columns.
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Shabby Chic no more
Up to $100,000 worth of antiques lost in this building which is to come down
There are council workers everywhere
At the end of the street where my daughter and family live.
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Manchester Courts, a seven-storey building on the corner of Hereford and Manchester Streets, is a category one historic place built in 1905-1906 that up until the 7.1 earthquake, housed offices. News of the scheduled demolition provoked an emotional response from the people of Christchurch. UPDATE 14 October 2010: A group of residents is campaig...
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These cracks would worry me but apparently the building is generally Ok.
Now demolished
This corner building ( Askos)has been demolished and the ones attached soon to ne
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A view after the 7.1 magnitude earthquake in Christchurch.
This NZBC religious programme goes where TV cameras had never gone before: behind the walls of the Carmelite monastery in Christchurch. There, it finds a community of 16 Catholic nuns, members of a 400-year-old order, who have shut themselves off from the outside world to lead lives devoted to prayer, contemplation and simple manual work. Despite their seclusion, the sisters are unphased by the intrusion and happy to discuss their lives and their beliefs; while the simplicity and ceremony of their world provides fertile ground for the monochrome camerawork.