A photograph of street art on the wall of a building between Brighton Mall and Hawke Street.
Damage to the Blackwells building in Kaiapoi. Part of the facade has collapsed onto the street below.
Detail of the Bridge Tavern in Kaiapoi, showing how the building has moved away from its balcony.
The word "repairs" painted on the side of a building has a large crack running through it.
A large pile of rubble from a demolished building. In the foreground is a garden seating area.
Cars parked on the lawn beside the NZi3 building. The photographer comments, "Lawns became parking spaces".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Badly damaged buildings viewed from yard behind 746 - 750 Colombo Street".
A photograph of a damaged building. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "128 Manchester Street".
A desk in the University of Canterbury's E-Learning team's new office in the James Hight building.
A desk in the University of Canterbury's E-Learning team's new office in the James Hight building.
Damage to a building on Montreal Street where a part of the brick wall has fallen out.
Damage to an apartment complex on Durham Street. The building has collapsed on the ground floor level.
Damage to an apartment complex on Durham Street. The building has collapsed on the ground floor level.
Verandah roof of former Central Library on left. Rubble is from the former Farmers building and carpark.
Closed due to earthquake damage. But it looks in better condition than the building I work in!
Same view as a previous shot - taken in January 2011 after the block of buildings was demolished.
Nothing wrong with this carpark building; that's just a mural on one of the structural shear walls.
Christchurch Earthquake 4th Sept 2010. Old Para Rubber building - Manchester St (between Tuam and St Asaph)
The Christchurch region of New Zealand experienced a series of major earthquakes and aftershocks between September 2010 and June 2011 which caused severe damage to the city’s infrastructure. The performance of tilt-up precast concrete buildings was investigated and initial observations are presented here. In general, tilt-up buildings performed well during all three major earthquakes, with mostly only minor, repairable damage occurring. For the in-plane loading direction, both loadbearing and cladding panels behaved exceptionally well, with no significant damage or failure observed in panels and their connections. A limited number of connection failures occurred due to large out-of-plane panel inertia forces. In several buildings, the connections between the panel and the internal structural frame appeared to be the weakest link, lacking in both strength and ductility. This weakness in the out-of-plane load path should be prevented in future designs.
Test results are presented for wall-diaphragm plate anchor connections that were axially loaded to rupture. These connection samples were extracted post-earthquake by sorting through the demolition debris from unreinforced masonry (URM) buildings damaged in the Christchurch earthquakes. Unfortunately the number of samples available for testing was small due to the difficulties associated with sample collection in an environment of continuing aftershocks and extensive demolition activity, when personal safety combined with commercial activity involving large demolition machinery were imperatives that inhibited more extensive sample collection for research purposes. Nevertheless, the presented data is expected to be of assistance to structural engineers undertaking seismic assessment of URM buildings that have existing wall-diaphragm anchor plate connections installed, where it may be necessary to estimate the capacity of the existing connection as an important parameter linked with determining the current seismic capacity of the building and therefore influencing the decision regarding whether supplementary connections should be installed.
A video of a presentation by Matthew Pratt during the Resilience and Response Stream of the 2016 People in Disasters Conference. The presentation is titled, "Investing in Connectedness: Building social capital to save lives and aid recovery".The abstract for this presentation reads as follows: Traditionally experts have developed plans to prepare communities for disasters. This presentation discusses the importance of relationship-building and social capital in building resilient communities that are both 'prepared' to respond to disaster events, and 'enabled' to lead their own recovery. As a member of the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority's Community Resilience Team, I will present the work I undertook to catalyse community recovery. I will draw from case studies of initiatives that have built community connectedness, community capacity, and provided new opportunities for social cohesion and neighbourhood planning. I will compare three case studies that highlight how social capital can aid recovery. Investment in relationships is crucial to aid preparedness and recovery.
A photograph of damage to St John's Church, Lyttelton.
A photograph of 96 Gloucester Street.
An aerial photograph of Mona Vale.
A photograph of 96 Gloucester Street.
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Avonside Church".
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Catholic Convent, Barbadoes Street".
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Avonside Church".
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Avonside Church".
A photograph captioned by Paul Corliss, "Avonside Church".