A show-home like office open in the Kirkwood Village for viewing.
A show-home like office open in the Kirkwood Village for viewing.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Nancy Clarke, 75, in her destroyed Bexley home".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Nancy Clarke, 75, in her destroyed Bexley home".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Nancy Clarke, 75, in her destroyed Bexley home".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Nancy Clarke, 75, in her destroyed Bexley home".
A show-home like office open in the Kirkwood Village for viewing.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Nancy Clarke, 75, in her destroyed Bexley home".
Typical of many homes in Kaiapoi still to be demolished and rebuit.
Christchurch is home to many diverse ethnic groups whose voices have sometimes gone unheard in the aftermath of the earthquakes and the city's rebuild plans. Katy Gosset visits a gathering in Christchurch's battered eastern suburbs to hear their thoughts on post-quake life and the future of their adopted home.
John Key wants inquiry into collapse of buildings; Police update on latest from Christchurch emergency; Cordon update; More budget cuts in store after Christchurch earthquake; Attention turns to shape of new Christchurch CBD; Clifton Hills residents able to go home after evacuations; Quake Minister says ten thousand homes may be written off.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Anaru Akuhata at his home after the Christchurch earthquake".
There are hopes an earthquake simulation in Porirua might result in homes being better prepared for a big shake. Houses on Christchurch's Port Hills suffered more damage than houses in other areas during the Canterbury Earthquakes - even though the ground shaking was roughly the same. Now the Earthquake Commission is on a mission to find out why that was - and prevent the same level of damage in a future quake. Checkpoint reporter Logan Church and video journalist Dom Thomas start their report up on a hilly farm above Wellington.
Christchurch architect Bob Burnett founded the Superhome movement after his children got sick "bouncing around substandard rentals" after the Christchurch earthquake.
A photograph of workers from the Residential Access Project standing on High Street near the intersection with Tuam Street. In the background, a trailer is being loaded with items salvaged from people's homes during the project which gave residents temporary access to the cordon to retrieve items from their homes.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Kay Currey and husband, Tom Bestor, have Kay's daughter, Pam Hamilton-Currey's family of five under the roof of their two bedroom home after Saturday's earthquake destroyed their home. Oliver, 8, Tom, Ethan, 12, Brae, 7, Pam and husband, Shane Hamilton".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Kay Currey and husband, Tom Bestor, have Kay's daughter, Pam Hamilton-Currey's family of five under the roof of their two bedroom home after Saturday's earthquake destroyed their home. Oliver, 8, Tom, Ethan, 12, Brae, 7, Pam and husband, Shane Hamilton".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Christchurch earthquake follow up. From left, Lisa Watson, her daughters Bethany, 9 and Micayla, 12, then Nikita, 5 and Jackson, 6 with their Mum Katrina Diver in Katrina's home with the floor crack. She is not sure what will come of her Brooklands home".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Joe Clark in the wreckage of a neighbour's home, Sumner".
A graph showing numbers of new home consents granted in Christchurch, Waimakariri and Selwyn.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake damage in a home after the 6.3 earthquake".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Displaced residents set up camp outside their homes in Richmond".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Earthquake damage in a home after the 6.3 earthquake".
Many chimneys fell from homes during Christchurch's 7.1 and 6.3 magnitude quakes.
A photograph of trailers full of furniture and belongings from people's homes on Poplar Lane parked on High Street near the intersection with Tuam Street. The items were removed from the homes during the Residential Access Project which gave residents temporary access within the red-zone cordon in order to retrieve their possessions.
Residents will find out today if they can remain, or if they'll have to leave their homes. With guests Pam Harrison, a Dallington resident who expects she'll have to abandon her home; Leanne Curtis, CanCERN spokesperson and Avonside resident; and David Middleton, former Chief Executive of the Earthquake Commission for 17 years.
A layout for the front page of an advertising feature on the Canterbury Home Show.
A photograph showing earthquake damaged homes in Dallington, following the series of earthquakes in Christchurch.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Signs outside homes in Locksley Ave, Dallington after the Christchurch earthquake".
The front page graphic for a supplement to The Press titled, "Land and new homes".