A photograph of the partially-demolished Hagley Hostel on Riccarton Avenue. A crane and an excavator are parked in front of the building. Wire fences and shipping containers have been placed around the outside as a cordon.
The tram stop in Cathedral Square seen through a cordon fence.
A demolition area and a digger seen through a security fence.
A damaged house inside the CBD cordon seen through a fence.
Spray-painted message on a fence reading "Stay clear wall unsafe".
Cordon fence at the corner of Gloucester Street and Oxford Terrace.
Damaged brick fence with the words 'Danger keep clear' on it.
The Citizens' Memorial beside the Cathedral has also been fenced off.
A woman taking photographs beside the cordon fence on Armagh Street.
Football turf has now gone and the area fenced off again.
The word 'faith' has been formed by flowers on the cordon fence beside St John the Baptist Church on Latimer Square. The photographer comments, "If I remember correctly this has been on the fence surrounding the Christchurch earthquake red zone for quite a while and looks remarkably pristine".
Looking across the faultline where the Saturday 4 September 2010 magnitude 7.1 earthquake originated. Note how much the previously straight fence is now out of alignment.
Looking across the faultline where the Saturday 4 September 2010 magnitude 7.1 earthquake originated. Note how much the previously straight fence is now out of alignment.
The Grant Thornton building in Cathedral Square seen through the cordon fence.
The former Linwood Public Library on Worcester Street has been fenced off.
A city apartment complex and the Christchurch Casino inside the cordon fence.
A banner for Ellerslie Internation Flower Show on the fence around the event,
A photograph of painted fence palings at the Gap Filler Butterfly Gap site.
Detail of damage to Beaufort House on Latimer Square, seen through a fence.
The entrance to the damaged Convention Centre seen from behind the cordon fence.
Staff member guards a fence closing off the campus after the September earthquake.
A fenced off building on the corner of Worcester Street and Stanmore Road.
A damaged house that has been fenced off with tape and road cones.
A photograph of the site of a demolished building on the corner of Bealey Avenue and Victoria Street. Wire fencing has been placed around the site as a cordon. Signs on the fence indicate that many of the businesses which were in the area have moved and are still open.
A video of an interview with Wendy Rushworth, whose house was fenced off despite not being scheduled for demolition. Falcon Construction accidently added Rushworth's property to a list of homes ready for demolition. The company has since apologised to Rushworth and removed the fencing.
This originally straight farm fence has been laterally displaced at least 2 metres where it crosses the previously unknown faultline from which the Saturday 4 September 2010 earthquake originated.
This originally straight farm fence has been laterally displaced at least 2 metres where it crosses the previously unknown Greendale Faultline from which the Saturday 4 September 2010 earthquake originated.
This originally straight farm fence has been laterally displaced at least 2 metres where it crosses the previously unknown faultline from which the Saturday 4 September 2010 earthquake originated.
This originally straight farm fence has been laterally displaced at least 2 metres where it crosses the previously unknown faultline from which the Saturday 4 September 2010 earthquake originated.
This originally straight farm fence has been laterally displaced at least 2 metres where it crosses the previously unknown faultline from which the Saturday 4 September 2010 earthquake originated.