A photograph of an excavator demolishing a building on Manchester Street.
A photograph of the badly-damaged building at 128 Manchester Street.
A close-up photograph of a sign about the Fisher's Building.
A photograph showing the remains of the McKenzie & Willis building.
A photograph of a digger demolishing a building on Tuam Street.
The right-hand section of a timeline of the CTV building.
The Ortszeit exhibition in an empty building site on Worcester Street.
Bricks on Struthers Lane, fallen from a building on Lichfield Street.
Gap Filler Headquarters, the 10 square metre office building in Sydenham.
A photograph of the back of badly-damaged High Street buildings.
A man removing bricks from a building on Oxford Street, Lyttelton.
A photograph of an excavator demolishing a building on Manchester Street.
Internal damage and remediation work to a building on Victoria Street.
A photograph of the damaged Country Theme building on Manchester Street.
A photograph of collapsed scaffolding outside a building on Manchester Street.
Fencing and road cones around a building on St Asaph Street.
The Ortszeit exhibition in an empty building site on Worcester Street.
A photograph of damage to the Richmond Working Men's Club building.
A photograph of the damaged Country Theme building on Manchester Street.
A photograph of the damaged Country Theme building on Manchester Street.
A photograph of the damaged Country Theme building on Manchester Street.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Red sticker on Pills For Thrills building".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Red sticker on Pills For Thrills building".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Police check damaged building following Canterbury's earthquake".
The former Town Hall building in Rangiora, behind a cordon fence.
A photograph of damage to the Richmond Working Men's Club building.
A photograph of street art on a transformer building in Waltham.
This building has beautiful iron ventilation grates at the street level.
On the Govt. Life building in the Square ready for demolition
It is well known that buildings constructed using unreinforced masonry (URM) are susceptible to damage from earthquake induced lateral forces that may result in partial or full building collapse. The 2010/2011 Canterbury earthquakes are the most recent New Zealand example of destructive earthquakes, which have drawn people's attention to the inherent seismic weaknesses of URM buildings and anchored masonry veneer systems in New Zealand. A brief review of the data collected following the 2010 Darfield earthquake and more comprehensive documentation of data that was collected following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake is presented, along with the findings from subsequent data interrogation. Large stocks of earthquake prone vintage URM buildings that remain in New Zealand and in other seismically active parts of the world result in the need for minimally invasive and cost effective seismic retrofit techniques. The principal objective of the doctoral research reported herein was to investigate the applicability of near surface mounted (NSM) carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) strips as a seismic improvement technique. A comprehensive experimental program consisting of 53 pull tests is presented and is used to assess the accuracy of existing FRP-to-masonry bond models, with a modified model being proposed. The strength characteristics of vintage clay brick URM wall panels from two existing URM buildings was established and used as a benchmark when manufacturing replica clay brick test assemblages. The applicability of using NSM CFRP strips as a retrofitting technique for improving the shear strength and the ductility capacity of multi-leaf URM walls constructed using solid clay brick masonry is investigated by varying CFRP reinforcement ratios. Lastly, an experimental program was undertaken to validate the proposed design methodology for improving the strength capacity of URM walls. The program involved testing full-scale walls in a laboratory setting and testing full-scale walls in-situ in existing vintage URM buildings. Experimental test results illustrated that the NSM CFRP technique is an effective method to seismically strengthen URM buildings.