A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
A photograph of an artwork by Mike Hewson. The mural is a reflection of the Government Life building in the background.
Tourism, native planting, and bee keeping are all possibilities a community lead working group is waiting on government funding to explore.
A photograph of an excavator demolishing a building on Armagh Street.
A photograph of a crack in the footpath along Gayhurst Road.
A photograph of earthquake damage to the curb of Gayhurst Road.
A video of an address by Alex Cutler, CEO of the New Zealand Green Building Council, at the 2014 Seismics and the City forum. This talk was part of the Building Communities section and explored the extent to which the new city core will be a 'government-flavoured doughnut', the key issues with this concept, and the possible solutions.
A photograph of cracks and liquefaction in the surface of Hagley Park.
A photograph of an Explore More campervan in Hagley Park.
A photograph of liquefaction in a garden on Avonside Drive.
A photograph of cracks and liquefaction in the surface of Hagley Park.
A photograph of emergency management personnel standing outside a school in Christchurch.
From tomorrow, the Government is winding down the subsidy that allows earthquake-damaged businesses in Canterbury to keep paying their workers' wages.
Labour MPs in Christchurch are calling on the Government to tell people now if their earthquake damaged land has to be abandoned.
Disgruntled Christchurch red-zoners who want the government to rethink its policy on quake-damaged homes are backing Labour's Earthquake Recovery Package.
The Government has appointed one of its most senior ministers to oversee the rebuilding of Canterbury following Saturday's 7.1 magnitude earthquake.
The Earthquake Recovery Minister and the Insurance Council both deny that insurance companies pressured the Government to relax building guidelines in Canterbury.
Prime Minister, John Key, denies money is being held back from the Canterbury earthquake recovery to make the Government's books look better.
Information about the Waimakariri District Council and its services. Earthquake information captured in the 2015 harvest
A copy of Empowered Christchurch's first newsletter, published on 4 September 2014.
Object Overview of 'Christchurch liquefaction study – Stage 4a (Addendum Report) (Beca, 2005).'
Collection Overview of 'District earthquake hazard assessments for engineering lifelines.'