Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake in Christchurch. Demolition of shops on the corner of Edgeware Road and Barbados Street".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake in Christchurch. Demolition of shops on the corner of Edgeware Road and Barbados Street".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake in Christchurch. Demolition of shops on the corner of Edgeware Road and Barbados Street".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake in Christchurch. Demolition of shops on the corner of Edgeware Road and Barbados Street".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake in Christchurch. Demolition of shops on the corner of Edgeware Road and Barbados Street".
A triangular empty site left after the demolition of a building on the corner of Victoria and Salisbury Streets.
Demolition rubble next to a house where the walls have crumbled. The wall has been covered by a tarpaulin.
An empty site left by the demolition of a building on the corner of Victoria Street and Bealey Avenue.
An empty site left by the demolition of a building on the corner of Victoria Street and Bealey Avenue.
In Colombo St, Sydenham
At least five companies are being investigated by the Canterbury Regional Council for dumping or burning earthquake demolition rubble illegally.
A page banner promoting articles about the use of social networks in Canterbury and about the demolition of Cranmer Courts.
A messy demolition site filled with various building waste. At the back is a Waste Management bin filled with rubbish.
The vacant lot left after the demolition of the Churchills Club Tavern on the corner of Colombo and Battersea Streets.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake and demolition destruction in Christchurch CBD. Rydges Hotel, Brannigans building and Clarendon Towers, Oxford Terrace".
A graphic showing heritage buildings restored using public money, which have since been marked for demolition due to earthquake damage.
The vacant lot left after the demolition of the Churchills Club Tavern on the corner of Colombo and Battersea Streets.
View through the cordon fence of the vacant lot left by the demolition of the Copthorne Hotel on Durham Street.
Empty spaces down a street in Christchurch Central. The sites on the right are left by the demolition of buildings.
The front page graphic for The Press, featuring an article about the dispute over the demolition of ChristChurch Cathedral.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Post-earthquake demolition. Materials from a building on St Asaph Street still waiting to be cleared".
A vacant site left after the demolition of a building. Around the site are some damaged walls and old fencing.
Two relatively new town houses in the Bexley "Red Zone". Awaiting demolition due to severe land problems. Have been vandalised.
A photograph of the partially-demolished Hagley Courts on Riccarton Avenue.
Earthquake demolition work in Christchurch has made way for an urban farm that is equipping young people with life and work skills.
The timeliness and quality of recovery activities are impacted by the organisation and human resourcing of the physical works. This research addresses the suitability of different resourcing strategies on post-disaster demolition and debris management programmes. This qualitative analysis primarily draws on five international case studies including 2010 Canterbury earthquake, 2009 L’Aquila earthquake, 2009 Samoan Tsunami, 2009 Victorian Bushfires and 2005 Hurricane Katrina. The implementation strategies are divided into two categories: collectively and individually facilitated works. The impacts of the implementation strategies chosen are assessed for all disaster waste management activities including demolition, waste collection, transportation, treatment and waste disposal. The impacts assessed include: timeliness, completeness of projects; and environmental, economic and social impacts. Generally, the case studies demonstrate that detritus waste removal and debris from major repair work is managed at an individual property level. Debris collection, demolition and disposal are generally and most effectively carried out as a collective activity. However, implementation strategies are affected by contextual factors (such as funding and legal constraints) and the nature of the disaster waste (degree of hazardous waste, geographical spread of waste etc.) and need to be designed accordingly. Community involvement in recovery activities such as demolition and debris removal is shown to contribute positively to psychosocial recovery.
Shot from up Hunstbury Hill with a 600mm f/4 on a very grey morning. 8am demolition. The guy behind me only looked up when the sounds of the explosion reahed us and the building was half way down!
A graphic promoting a discussion on press.co.nz of an article about the demolition of red-zoned houses in Bexley.
A demolition site where loose cables hang from the roof. Construction workers and a digger can be seen behind the rubble.
A demolition site where loose cables hang from the roof. Construction workers and a digger can be seen behind the rubble.