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.
Set during the 1974 Commonwealth Games, The Games Affair was a thriller fantasy series for children. Remembered fondly by many who were kids in the 70s, the story follows three teenagers who battle a miscreant professor who's experimenting on athletes with performance enhancing drugs. This first episode include some SFX jumping sheep; John Bach as a blonde, grunting villain, and a youthful Elizabeth McRae. It was NZ telly's first children's serial, the first independently produced long-form drama, and an early credit for producer John Barnett.
This documentary, made by TVNZ’s Natural History Unit (now NHNZ), charts the progress of the nor'west wind from its formation in the Tasman Sea across the Southern Alps to the Canterbury Plains and the east coast of the South Island. Along the way it dumps metres of precipitation on West Coast rain forest and snow on the Alps, then transforms to a dry, hot wind racing across the Plains. The film shows the wind's impact on the ecosystem and farming and muses on the mysterious effect it can have on humans. It screened as part of the beloved Wild South series.
A Week of It was a pioneering comedy series that entertained and often outraged audiences over three series from 1977 to 1979. The writing team, led by David McPhail, AK Grant, Jon Gadsby, Bruce Ansley, Chris McVeigh and Peter Hawes, took irreverent aim at topical issues and public figures of the day. Amongst notable impersonations was McPhail's famous aping of Prime Minister Rob Muldoon; a catchphrase from a skit — "Jeez, Wayne" — entered NZ pop culture. The series won multiple Feltex Awards and in 1979 McPhail won Entertainer of the Year.
Page 10 of Section B of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 10 September 2010.
Canta Magazine Volume 81 Issue 19 from 20 September 2010.
Page 2 of a One Year On: Taking Stock special feature in the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 23 February 2012.
Page 13 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 24 June 2011.
Page 4 of Section A of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 17 June 2011.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 22 February 2012.
Page 4 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 22 February 2012.
Page 14 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 11 March 2011.
Page 12 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 17 June 2011.
Page 2 of Section C of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 2 February 2013.
Canta Magazine Volume 83 Issue 8 from 2 May 2012.
Page 5 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 25 April 2012.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Monday 30 July 2012.
Page 4 of Section B of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 5 March 2011.
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 4 September 2010 entitled, "Our Earthquake".
Page 16 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 24 September 2011.