A pile of demolition rubble on Gloucester Street. The site was formerly that of the Brannigans building.
A photograph of a demolition site on the corner of Tuam Street and Colombo Street.
A pile of demolition rubble on Gloucester Street. The site was formerly that of the Brannigans building.
Hundreds of sunflowers have been planted in empty Christchurch sites to brighten up the city centre.
A photograph of a demolition site on the corner of Tuam Street and Colombo Street.
A photograph of an empty site left by the demolition of buildings on Colombo Street.
A photograph of cars parked on the site of a demolished building on Hereford Street.
A photograph of cars parked on the site of a demolished building on Hereford Street.
A photograph of a demolition site on the corner of Tuam Street and Poplar Street.
A photograph of an excavator on the site of a demolished building on Gloucester Street.
A photograph of an empty site on Hereford Street where a building has been demolished.
Messages written on stones left in front of the cordon fence around the CTV Building site.
A photograph looking across to Hereford Street from a cleared building site on Cashel Street.
A black and white photograph of a steel structure on a demolition site filled with building rubble.
A wall on the former site of Piko Wholefoods, with loose bricks protuding from the corner.
Weeds growing on the site of a demolished building. In the foreground is an abandoned shoe.
The Triton Dairy has reopened in a container on the site of its demolished former building.
Detail of fence around the site of the demolished St. John's Anglican Church on Latimer Square.
A photograph of a demolition site. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "Madras Street".
A photograph of a demolition site. The photograph is captioned by Paul Corliss, "Madras Street".
Messages written on stones left in front of the cordon fence around the CTV Building site.
Cultural heritage is a dynamic concept, incorporating the ideas and values of many different organisations and individuals; it is heavily dependent on the context of the item or site being conserved, and transforms something from an old article into a historically significant object. A formal definition of cultural heritage did not appear in the Antarctic Treaty System until 1995, however Antarctic heritage value has been applied to various sites and monuments since the inception of the Treaty, from Shackleton’s Nimrod Hut to a heavy tractor. This report examines a number of case studies to determine the various ways in which heritage items and sites can be managed – such as the removal of the South Pole Dome – as well as their conservation after natural disasters, for instance the Christchurch earthquakes.
The latest two great earthquake sequences; 2010- 2011 Canterbury Earthquake and 2016 Kaikoura Earthquake, necessitate a better understanding of the New Zealand seismic hazard condition for new building design and detailed assessment of existing buildings. It is important to note, however, that the New Zealand seismic hazard map in NZS 1170.5.2004 is generalised in effort to cover all of New Zealand and limited to a earthquake database prior to 2001. This is “common” that site-specific studies typically provide spectral accelerations different to those shown on the national map (Z values in NZS 1170.5:2004); and sometimes even lower. Moreover, Section 5.2 of Module 1 of the Earthquake Geotechnical Engineering Practice series provide the guidelines to perform site- specific studies.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Bedford Row viewed across demolition sites from Cashel Street".
A claws of an excavator and a digger on a demolition site on Kilmore Street.
A photograph of excavators clearing rubble from the site of the partially-demolished Cranmer Centre.
A photograph of excavators clearing rubble from the site of the partially-demolished Cranmer Centre.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "A digger being moved from one site to another".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The site of Dowson's Shoes at 68 Lichfield Street".
A empty site in Bexley where a house once stood is surrounded by security fencing.