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".
A photograph of an advertisement for Gap Filler on the corner of Manchester Street and Dundas Street.
A view through a gap in the partially-demolished Crowne Plaza Hotel to the Forsyth Barr building.
Shops on Ferry Road, across the road from the demolition site where the Gap Filler Piano Project is.
Co-founders of Gap Filler, a creative urban regeneration initiative started in Canterbury in response to the earthquakes.
A photograph of a partially-completed mural. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "Colombo Street Gap Filler".
A photograph of a participant at an outdoor pizzeria earth-building workshop. The event was part of FESTA 2012.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Monday 30 July 2012.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
A close up of a broken stained-glass window of Christ Church Cathedral. Gaps in stonework can be seen around the window.
Wayne Youle's mural 'I Seem to Have Temporarily Misplaced My Sense of Humour' (2012), displayed in a Gap Filler site Sydenham.
For people in Christchurch who have to temporarily leave their earthquake damaged home, two housing villages are filling the accommodation gap.
The Lyttelton Community Garden in next to the Lyttelton Petanque Club, a Gap Filler project in the empty site of the Ground Culinary Centre.
Moira Fraser talks to a staff member at Coffee Zone, a cafe in a shack on a Gap Filler site in Sydenham.
Moira Fraser talking to the staff at the Coffee Zone, a cafe in a shack on a Gap Filler site in Sydenham.
A house in Richmond being demolished. A gap between the foundation and the bottom of a wall. The photographer comments, "The end of 393 River Rd".
The floor plate covering the gap between the Locke and Logie buildings was buckled by the force of the movement during the 23 December 2011 earthquake.
The floor plate covering the gap between the Locke and Logie buildings was buckled by the force of the movement during the 23 December 2011 earthquake.
A painted piano that was part of the Painted Piano project organised by Gap Filler. This was one of the 3 painted pianos placed around Christchurch.