A photograph of the former site of Westende Jewellers and Alva Rados, on the corner of Manchester Street and Worcester Street. The building was badly-damaged in the 4 September earthquake and was demolished soon afterwards. A two-storey building was built on the site and completed in July 2012. The building then had to be removed when the decision was made to widen Manchester Street as part of the draft transport plan for central Christchurch. The photograph was modelled after an image taken by Ian McGregor from Fairfax Media in September 2010.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Demolition site of Warners Hotel, taken from Gloucester Street with a view through to the Heritage Hotel and Millennium Hotel. The Hotel Grand Chancellor is behind".
An elaborate graffiti tag sprayed on a wall beside a demolition site on Tuam Street. A collection of abandoned objects lie on the site. The photographer comments, "Graffiti spotted in the Christchurch earthquake red zone. What I liked was the odd mixture of bits and bobs around it".
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building at the corner of Worcester Street and Stanmore Road. A memorial poster made to commemorate Natasha Sarah Hadfield, who died at the site where the Wicks Fish business was located. On it are comments from the public and the word ' We miss you mummy' in big letters.
Pumice materials, which are problematic from an engineering viewpoint, are widespread in the central part of the North Island. Considering the impacts of the 2010-2011 Christchurch earthquakes, a clear understanding of their properties under earthquake loading is necessary. For example, the 1987 Edgecumbe earthquake showed evidence of localised liquefaction of sands of volcanic origin. To elucidate on this, research was undertaken to investigate whether existing empirical field-based methods to evaluate the liquefaction potential of sands, which were originally developed for hard-grained soils, are applicable to crushable pumice-rich deposits. For this purpose, two sites, one in Whakatane and another in Edgecumbe, were selected where the occurrence of liquefaction was reported following the Edgecumbe earthquake. Manifestations of soil liquefaction, such as sand boils and ejected materials, have been reported at both sites. Field tests, including cone penetration tests (CPT), shear-wave velocity profiling, and screw driving sounding (SDS) tests were performed at the sites. Then, considering estimated peak ground accelerations (PGAs) at the sites based on recorded motions and possible range of ground water table locations, liquefaction analysis was conducted at the sites using available empirical approaches. To clarify the results of the analysis, undisturbed soil samples were obtained at both sites to investigate the laboratory-derived cyclic resistance ratios and to compare with the field-estimated values. Research results clearly showed that these pumice-rich soils do not fit existing liquefaction assessment frameworks and alternate methods are necessary to characterise them.
A digger clearing rubble on the site of the CTV Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damaged site of Domo furniture store.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Cathedral Square. Regent Theatre site".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Site of 202 Cashel Street".
A digger clearing rubble on the site of the CTV Building.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Cleared site on Avonside Drive".
A map showing the locations of free Telecom wi-fi sites.
A picnic on the site of the Think Differently Book Exchange.
A graphic showing a proposed design for the Triangle Centre site.
A photograph of the site of a demolished building in Heathcote.
A map showing the site of the new central police station.
A photograph of excavators at work on a central Christchurch site.
A photograph of the demolition site of Queen Elizabeth II Park.
People playing bike polo on Gap Filler's "Dance-O-Mat" site.
Story telling at the site of the Think Differently Book Exchange.
A photograph of the demolition site of Queen Elizabeth II Park.
A photograph of the demolition site of Queen Elizabeth II Park.
Tributes left on the cordon fence around the CTV Building site.
Tributes left on the cordon fence around the CTV Building site.
Flowers and tributes left on the fence surrounding the CTV site.
Flowers and tributes left on the fence surrounding the CTV site.
A photograph of the site of a demolished building in Heathcote.
A photograph of the site of a demolished building in Heathcote.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Site of 208 Cashel Street".
The vacant site left by the demolition of the Strategy Building.