
USAR codes have been spray painted in orange on the fence of a house on Gloucester Street.
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Humpty Dumpty sits on a fence in Cunningham Terrace, Lyttelton".
A photograph of warning signs on the fence around the demolition site of Queen Elizabeth II Park.
A photograph of warning signs on the fence around the demolition site of Queen Elizabeth II Park.
A photograph of the entrance to Majestic House on Manchester Street. The building has been fenced off.
Houses on Armagh Street that have been cordoned off. On the fence are USAR spray painted markings.
Looking inside the cordon fence towards the demolition work on the Manchester Securities House on Gloucester Street.
Seen through the cordon fence, water fills the former basement of the ANZ building on Hereford Street.
Yellow ribbons tied to a cordon fence in Cashel Street protest the proposed demolition of the Cathedral.
A digitally manipulated image of 'Save Our Cathedral' ribbons hanging from a cordon fence near Latimer Square.
A photograph of bricks and wooden framing piled up in between a house and fence in Christchurch.
Looking inside the cordon fence towards the demolition work on the Manchester Securities House on Gloucester Street.
Heart shaped fabric has been woven on the cordon fence in Lyttelton. It reads 'Live Love Life'.
Damage to a fence on a residential property in Pines Beach, after the September 4th earthquake.
The words "we're ok" spray painted on the fence of a house located in the CBD.
Damaged buildings behind cordon fences. There are also pot holes of footpaths and the garden are overgrown.
Looking over the cordon fence, steel support on the exterior wall next to emergency fire exit stairs.
Building cordoned off behind the fence and road cones on the corner of Gloucester and Cambridge Terrace.
Looking through the cordon fence, a pile of brick in front a damaged building in Christchurch central.
An overgrown site in Christchurch Central. Some damaged building and fences can be seen in the background.
A photograph of warning signs on the fence around the demolition site of Queen Elizabeth II Park.
View over the fence around the site of the demolished St. John's Anglican Church on Latimer Square.
Safety fences enclosing a vacant site on Williams Street in Kaiapoi where a building has been demolished.
Yellow ribbons tied to a cordon fence in Cashel Street protest the proposed demolition of the Cathedral.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Christchurch Earthquake aftermath. John Donaldson standing on the fence of his Wainoni home".
A photograph of Red Cross NZ volunteers putting All Right? corflute signs on cordon fence. Hotel Ibis is in the background. The All Right? corflute signs are from phase 2 of the All Right? campaign, which sought to promote the 'Five Ways To Wellbeing' by asking simple, open-ended questions related to wellbeing.
A photograph of St Luke's Church on the corner of Manchester Street and Kilmore Street. Large sections of the church have collapsed and the masonry and other rubble have spilled onto the car park. Wire fences have been placed around the side of the building as a cordon.
Lyttelton band, Runaround Sue, performing at Gap Filler's "Film in the Gap!" project in Beckenham. Gap Filler have enclosed one side of the site with a fence made of old metal bed heads. The fence has been decorated with fairy lights. Other decorations to the project sight includes the brightly coloured bunting above the audience, which is attached to the wall of Beckenham's Mitre 10.
A view down Chancery Lane through cordon fencing. A sign reading "No Entry" is posted on the fence, and fallen leaves have accumulated around the fence and buildings. The photographer comments, "Chancery Lane in the Christchurch CBD red zone looks like it has had no one through at all since the February earthquake".
A photograph of a man standing inside the cordon fence which has been placed around a building on Cashel Street. Road cones have also been placed around the building and the word "Danger" has been spray-painted on the footpath in front. Fallen masonry from the building lies on the footpath in front.