A digger on Waitaki Street, Bexley.
The damaged TimeZone games arcade on Colombo Street. The roof has collapsed, batts from the ceiling are piled in the window, and the door is boarded up. Taken on a day when a walkway was opened up between Re:Start Mall and Cathedral Square to allow temporary public access.
A photograph captioned, "We get the young fellas to come in and do the upkeep on the government houses that have been sold. They cut down all the long grass and just tidy up all the fire risk sections. This one's easier cos the house is gone. If you keep it tidy it looks tidy from the road. There's people living here, and there's nothing worse than looking over your house and seeing grass this high".
A photograph from a time-lapse series documenting the contruction of Gap Filler's Pallet Pavilion. The photograph was taken from the top of the Christchurch Casino.
A photograph from a time-lapse series documenting the contruction of Gap Filler's Pallet Pavilion. The photograph was taken from the top of the Christchurch Casino.
A photograph of an excavator demolishing the Christchurch Convention Centre. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "Peterborough Street".
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Railway Station, Moorhouse Avenue".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Decorated shipping container, Main Road, Sumner protecting the Road at the base of the cliff below Kinsey Terrace".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "10 Blue Lagoon Drive, a red zoned property in Brooklands".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The spiral staircase in Alice in Videoland on the corner of High Street and Tuam".
A digitally manipulated image of the Gap Filler Monopoly board square on Manchester Street. The photographer comments, "On the site of a demolished earthquake damaged building in Christchurch, New Zealand is a Monopoly game square for giants. The Gap Filler Project makes the bare land where once a building once stood into something both interesting and unique and this time they created a massive Monopoly board square. In the game of Monopoly you move your player with a dog, shoe or maybe the hat, but as the most common thing in the City are diggers they have the placed one on the square. There are also two houses on Manchester Street, which is priced at $240".
Long grass on the cordon side of the river beside the Worcester Boulevade bridge contrasts with the mown lawn on the publicly accessible opposite bank.
The completed "Knit Happens" mural on the exposed brick wall of a building.
A photograph from a time-lapse series documenting the contruction of Gap Filler's Pallet Pavilion. The photograph was taken from the top of the Christchurch Casino.
A photograph from a time-lapse series documenting the contruction of Gap Filler's Pallet Pavilion. The photograph was taken from the top of the Christchurch Casino.
A photograph of road works at the corner of St Andrews Hill Road and Rangatira Terrace, Mount Pleasant.
A photograph of a house teetering on a cliff edge above Sumner.
Page 17 of the Your Weekend section of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 9 June 2012.
Page 11 of the Zest section of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 July 2012.
Page 6 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 13 July 2012.
Page 3 of Section H of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 21 July 2012.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Monday 23 July 2012.
Page 7 of Section D of the South Island edition of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 4 August 2012.
A crane lifting workers to the upper stories of Clarendon Towers. Some of the windows and parts of the wall have been boarded up.
Page 2 of The Box section of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 14 August 2012.
Page 7 of Section E of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 18 August 2012.
Page 9 of Section C of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 29 August 2012.
Page 7 of Section F of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 15 September 2012.
The Pacific Tower building on Gloucester Street, with repairs to cracks visible down one side. Constructed in 2010, the Pacific Tower was at the time the tallest building in Christchurch.
Page 1 of Section B of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 21 September 2012.