A photograph of the view down Tramway Lane, showing building deconstruction work.
Detail of the deconstruction work being done on the Crowne Plaza Hotel.
A photograph of a small bulldozer at work on a demolition site.
Business Analyst Lucy-Jane Walsh at work in the UC CEISMIC Programme office.
Detail of the deconstruction work on the Pacific Brands House on Victoria Street.
In 2010 and 2011, Aotearoa New Zealand was hit by a number of major disasters involving loss of human life and severe disruption to social, ecological and economic wellbeing. The Pike River mine explosions were closely followed by a sequence of major earthquakes in Christchurch, seismic events that have permanently altered the lives of thousands of people in our third largest city, the closure of the central business district and the effective abandonment of whole residential areas. In early October 2011, the ship, Rena, grounded on a reef off the port of Tauranga and threatened a major oil spill throughout the Bay of Plenty, where local communities with spiritual and cultural connections to the land depend on sea food as well as thrive on tourism. The Council for Social Work Education Aotearoa New Zealand (CSWEANZ), representing all the Schools of Social Work in New Zealand, held a ‘Disaster Curriculum’ day in November 2011, at which social workers and Civil Defence leaders involved in the Christchurch earthquakes, the Rena Disaster, Fiji floods and the Boxing Day tsunami presented their narrative experience of disaster response and recovery. Workshops discussed and identified core elements that participants considered vital to a social work curriculum that would enable social work graduates in a range of community and cultural settings to respond in safe, creative and informed ways. We present our core ideas for a social work disaster curriculum and consider a wide range of educational content based on existing knowledge bases and new content within a disaster framework. http://www.swsd-stockholm-2012.org/
Decoration on the cordon fence. Ongoing construction work can be seen in the background.
Deconstruction of the Crowne Plaza Hotel. A crane and digger are seen at work.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Restoration work in progress on 235 High Street".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Provincial Council Chambers - the careful repair work continues here".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "A worker doing remedial work on 167 Hereford Street".
Damage to the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament. View from the side with diggers at work.
Damage to the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament. View from the side with diggers at work.
Remediation work being carried out on a property. The front door entrance has been boarded up.
A video about a fire which broke out in an earthquake-damaged building on High Street. The video includes an interview with Steve Kennedy, Canterbury Fire Service Assistant Area Manager, Brigid Fayle, who worked in the building prior to the 22 February 2011 earthquake, and Anne MacKenzie, a structural engineer who worked on strengthening the building.
Ongoing repair and deconstruction work on Victoria Street. A demolition site has been turned to a carpark.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "'Twinkle Toes' ready to start work demolishing the Holiday Inn".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Art work decoration on a shipping container, Main Road, Sumner".
Nikki Evans, Department of Social Work and Human Services, who has been researching human-animal relationships after the earthquakes.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crown Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crowne Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.
Detail of some remediation work being carried out on a property. The front door entrance has been boarded up.
Nikki Evans, Department of Social Work and Human Services, who has been researching human-animal relationships after the earthquakes.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crowne Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crowne Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crown Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crown Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crown Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.
This artwork is a legal graffiti work, part of Project Legit which is run by the Christchurch City Council.
A photograph of the former main entrance to the Crown Plaza Hotel, showing deconstruction work in progress.