The C.F. Cotter & Co building on High Street. Security fencing has been placed around the building to restrict access. Weeds are growing on the vacant construction lot next to the building.
Damage to the Kenton Chambers building. Diagonal cracking between the windows shows that the building has suffered major structural damage.
Emergency personnel lifting a metal beam from the ruins of the Canterbury Television Building on Madras Street during their search for trapped people.
An entry from Roz Johnson's blog for 5 August 2013 entitled, "Colourful Canterbury Brewery Building Going".
Page 4 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 6 April 2011.
Building had deteriorated significantly. And now it has been demolished
The Manchester Courts building was a heritage building located in central Christchurch (New Zealand) that was damaged in the Mw 7.1 Darfield earthquake on 4 September 2010 and subsequently demolished as a risk reduction exercise. Because the building was heritage listed, the decision to demolish the building resulted in strong objections from heritage supporters who were of the opinion that the building had sufficient residual strength to survive possible aftershock earthquakes. On 22 February 2011 Christchurch was struck by a severe aftershock, leading to the question of whether building demolition had proven to be the correct risk reduction strategy. Finite element analysis was used to undertake a performance-based assessment, validating the accuracy of the model using the damage observed in the building before its collapse. In addition, soil-structure interaction was introduced into the research due to the comparatively low shear wave velocity of the soil. The demolition of a landmark heritage building was a tragedy that Christchurch will never recover from, but the decision was made considering safety, societal, economic and psychological aspects in order to protect the city and its citizens. The analytical results suggest that the Manchester Courts building would have collapsed during the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, and that the collapse of the building would have resulted in significant fatalities.
Site of a fund that exists to provide financial assistance to owners of earthquake damaged qualifying heritage buildings so that the buildings can be saved if they are repairable.
Instead of concentrating on the buildings destroyed in and after the earthquakes in Christchurch's CBD, a new event is enticing people back to explore the heritage buildings that have survived. A new organisation, Te Putahi, is behind the Open Christchurch programme that celebrates the city's surviving architecture, starting with inner-city schools throwing open their doors to the public. Architectural historian and co-founder of Te Putahi, Dr Jessica Halliday tells Lynn Freeman they hope to encourage discussion around well-designed spaces and their impacts on peoples' lives. Open Christchurch starts next Sunday with a tour of The Cathedral Grammar Junior School.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden standing under her painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A colour photograph of the north face of the Anderson's Building, viewed from Cashel Street taken before the earthquakes.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard on Ferry Road in Christchurch.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard on Ferry Road in Christchurch.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard on Ferry Road in Christchurch.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard in Auckland.
Nilgun Kulpe a counsellor with Relationship Services in Christchurch who was working on the 5th floor of the CTV building when the earthquake struck.
The partial collapse of a Christchurch building in an overnight blaze has sent three firefighters to hospital, and raised a possible link to the February earthquake.
A Canterbury University engineer says building standards need to be upgraded before rebuilding begins in the earthquake battered region.
The Canterbury Earthquakes Royal Commission begins looking into the collapse of the Canterbury Television Building today, with dramatic evidence due to be heard from some of the survivors.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building' displayed on a billboard on Taranaki Street, Wellington.
A written history of 178 Cashel Street, the former Pyne Gould Guinness Building.
A document which describes the establishment of the SCIRT Women in Construction (SWIC) group and its achievements.