A photograph of a detail of damage to the Music Centre of Christchurch.
A photograph of a detail of damage to the Music Centre of Christchurch.
A photograph of a detail of damage to the Music Centre of Christchurch.
A photograph of the damaged Music Centre of Christchurch.
Looking south west across Cathedral Square showing the eastern side of Christchurch Cathedral (left), the Godley statue (centre left) with the (from left to right) Chief Post Office, the Regent Theatre Building (directly behind the statue on the corner of Worcester Street), the AMP Building, the Government Life Building and the Grand Theatre.
A photograph of a detail of damage to the Music Centre of Christchurch.
Earthquake damage to the Christchurch Chinese Methodist Church at 163 Papanui Road.
Earthquake damage to the Christchurch Chinese Methodist Church at 163 Papanui Road.
A photograph of the Observatory tower at the Christchurch Arts Centre, taken before the 2010 and 2011 Canterbury earthquakes.
A brochure created for Beca Heritage Week 2014, outlining SCIRT's repair work on heritage structures in the Central City. It was handed out to members of the public at SCIRT's walk and talk tours.
A photograph of a window of the Observatory tower at the Christchurch Arts Centre.
A photograph of rubble from the Observatory tower in the South Quad of the Christchurch Arts Centre. The tower collapsed during the 22 February 2011 earthquake.
A close-up photograph of parts of the Townsend Telescope recovered from the rubble of the Observatory tower. The telescope was housed in the tower at the Christchurch Arts Centre. It was severely damaged when the tower collapsed during the 22 February 2011 earthquake.
In the wake of the Canterbury earthquakes, one of the biggest threats to our heritage buildings is the risk of earthquakes and the associated drive to strengthen or demolish buildings. Can Small Town NZ balance the requirements of the EQPB legislation and economic realities of their places? The government’s priority is on safety of building occupants and citizens in the streets. However, maintaining and strengthening privately-owned heritage buildings is often cost prohibitive. Hence, heritage regulation has frequently been perceived as interfering with private property rights, especially when heritage buildings occupy a special place in the community becoming an important place for people (i.e. public benefits are larger than private). We investigate several case studies where building owners have been given green light to demolish heritage listed buildings to make way for modern developments. In two of the case studies developers provided evidence of unaffordable strengthening costs. A new trend that has emerged is a voluntary offer of contributing to an incentive fund to assist with heritage preservation of other buildings. This is a unique example where private owners offer incentives (via council controlled organisations) instead of it being purely the domain of the central or local governments.
A video contributed by Paul Allan-Sheen, a participant in the Understanding Place research project. The video has the description "Dog walking".
Earthquake damage to the Christchurch Chinese Methodist Church at 163 Papanui Road.
A photograph of salvaged building materials from the Christchurch Chinese Methodist Church at 163 Papanui Road.
A photograph of a foundation stone from the Christchurch Chinese Methodist Church at 163 Papanui Road. The stone reads, "AD 1894".
A conference paper prepared for the 4th Australasian Engineering Heritage Conference which outlines the challenges faced by SCIRT when repairing the Armagh Bridge, Colombo Bridge and Antigua Bridge.
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "230 Fitzgerald Avenue, Christchurch".
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "230 Fitzgerald Avenue, Christchurch".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The Christchurch Club, 154 Worcester Street".
A photograph of a detail of damage to the Music Centre of Christchurch.
Earthquake damage to the Christchurch Chinese Methodist Church at 163 Papanui Road.
A photograph of a detail of damage to the Music Centre of Christchurch.
Damage to the Christchurch School of Music building. The gable on the building has crumbled and bricks can be seen along the ground.
An award application for the Civil Contractors NZ Hirepool Construction Excellence Awards 2015 which details Downer's approach to repairing the Armagh Street bridge.
A video which describes the history of the bridge and SCIRT's repair methodology.
A document containing photographs of SCIRT's Armagh Street bridge repairs.
A document which lists the awards won by SCIRT.