‘Rubbish’ is the most common thing we find on our 19th century archaeological sites. I have ‘rubbish’ in quotation marks because to us what we find isn’t rubbish, it’s the material evidence of what life was like in the early … Continue reading →
‘Rubbish’ is the most common thing we find on our 19th century archaeological sites. I have ‘rubbish’ in quotation marks because to us what we find isn’t rubbish, it’s the material evidence of what life was like in the early … Continue reading →
At the turn of the 20th century, Christchurch’s rubbish disposal underwent a fiery transformation. After 50 years of settlement, Christchurch was facing a rubbish crisis that was starting to get people worried. The council’s weekly kerbside rubbish collection service, which … Continue reading →
Rubbish abandoned in a residential property on Birch Street.
Rubbish abandoned in a residential property on Birch Street.
A truck dumps rubbish.
A photograph looking down Cashel Street. The Just Jeans store has been fenced off and there is a rubbish skip outside.
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 21 March 2011 entitled, "Day 28 Rotting Rubbish and Furrtive Footprints".
Earthquake rubbish dump at Bottlelake Forest.
Earthquake rubbish dump at Bottlelake Forest.
A rubbish truck collects rubbish from the red bins along Rocking Horse Road in Southshore. The uneven surface of the road can be seen, with water pooling in the foreground.
…this yard being kept in a disreputable state, there are no cinder pits in proper places to throw the refuse of cooking and things in general, as at home, so old bones, vegetable remains, scrapings of plates, cinders, tea leaves, … Continue reading →
A rubbish skip outside a building on Lichfield Street.
A photograph of an abandoned section at the end of Mitcham Place in Bexley, next to Sopley Lane. A pile of household rubbish and broken furniture has been left on the footpath in front of the property.
Weeds and rubbish in front of a cordoned-off restaurant.
A photograph of a pile of scrap metal and general rubbish.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "This container is placed vertically against the building and filled with debris".
A truck delivers a rubbish skip to the entrance to the Rutherford building.
A truck delivers a rubbish skip to the entrance to the Rutherford building.
A truck delivers a rubbish skip to the entrance to the Rutherford building.
Look through the cordon fence, piles of building rubble, rubbish skips and shipping containers.
TVs, shopping trolleys, beds, mattresses, even a gun. That is just some of the rubbish found by residents surrounding Christchurch's residential red zone. The area used to be filled with houses, but damage after the Canterbury earthquakes forced thousands of homes to be demolished. While many of the old suburban roads remain, the area now resembles a park. But it is now attracting those wanting to dump their rubbish for free - and Land Information NZ, which controls the land, has removed 25 tonnes of trash since January. Residents have had enough as well - with some taking matters into their own hands. Checkpoint reporter Logan Church has the story.
A hole in a broken driveway along Avonside drive with a rubbish bin fallen in.
Christchurch red zone residents say the area is experiencing an increasing amount of petty crime and dumped rubbish, due to a lack of people. The red zone was established after thousands of houses - and the land underneath them - suffered severe damage in the 2010 and 2011 earthquakes. Last year (2019), a Regeneration Plan for the area was signed off by the government - which included building walkways, cycleways, forests, wetlands, and sport and recreation areas. That's all designed to get people back into the red zone area - but much of the work is still years away. Logan Church met a resident who told him that in the meantime, things are deteriorating.
If you've used your eftpos card, caught a bus or taxi, taken a photo on your smartphone or mapped a run or walk then you've probably used GPS - the global positioning system developed by the US military. Christchurch city council is using location technology to keep tabs on the city's rubbish bins. With nearly half a million wheelie bins in circulation, it's hoping to track down 16.000 wheelie bins that are missing following the February 2011 earthquake.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Back of 65-67 Worcester Street viewed from Gloucester Street".
A photograph taken inside Robin Duff's house at 386 Oxford Terrace. Broken furniture and rubbish litter the ground.
A photograph taken inside Robin Duff's house at 386 Oxford Terrace. Broken furniture and rubbish litter the ground.
A rubbish skip in an alleyway is full of building rubble, with piles of bricks scattered around it.
A photograph looking north up Colombo Street toward The Crossing. Rubbish skips line the left hand side of the road.