A page banner for a feature titled, 'The Land Report'.
A page banner promoting an article about land damage assessment.
A page banner for a feature titled, 'The Land Report'.
An aerial photograph of a industrial land development in Rolleston.
A page layout for a feature titled, "The land report".
A photograph of damaged land near River Road in Lincoln.
A page banner promoting an article about land damage assessment.
A page banner for a feature titled, "The land report".
A map showing proposed land zoning in north-west Christchurch.
Pages 14 and 15 of a Land and New Homes advertising feature in the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 1 March 2012.
Pages 16 and 17 of a Land and New Homes advertising feature in the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 28 July 2011.
A news item titled, "Know Your Land Rights - Retaining Walls", published on the Lyttelton Harbour Information Centre's website on Friday, 15 July 2011.
A digital copy of a painting by Julia Holden. The painting is of an excavator parked on a cleared block of land. The land is on Colombo Street, near the corner of Armagh Street.
A map showing the location of Orange-Zoned land in Canterbury.
An infographic comparing the costs of red-zoning and remediating land.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Avonside (mostly red zone land)".
Turning parts of Christchurch's red zoned land into a flat water sports lake, a community garden or a wave garden are some of the ideas being put forward to revitalise the earthquake-ravaged eastern part of the city.
The Canterbury region of New Zealand was shaken by major earthquakes on the 4th September 2010 and 22nd February 2011. The quakes caused 185 fatalities and extensive land, infrastructure and building damage, particularly in the Eastern suburbs of Christchurch city. Almost 450 ha of residential and public land was designated as a ‘Red Zone’ unsuitable for residential redevelopment because land damage was so significant, engineering solutions were uncertain, and repairs would be protracted. Subsequent demolition of all housing and infrastructure in the area has left a blank canvas of land stretching along the Avon River corridor from the CBD to the sea. Initially the Government’s official – but enormously controversial – position was that this land would be cleared and lie fallow until engineering solutions could be found that enabled residential redevelopment. This paper presents an application of a choice experiment (CE) that identified and assessed Christchurch residents’ preferences for different land use options of this Red Zone. Results demonstrated strong public support for the development of a recreational reserve comprising a unique natural environment with native fauna and flora, healthy wetlands and rivers, and recreational opportunities that align with this vision. By highlighting the value of a range of alternatives, the CE provided a platform for public participation and expanded the conversational terrain upon which redevelopment policy took place. We conclude the method has value for land use decision-making beyond the disaster recovery context.
An aerial photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The Avon River windings its way through densely pupulated housing. The Gayhurst Road bridge can be seen. The piece of land circumscribed by the loop of the river is all zoned red, as is the land to the left of the photo. On the right, most of the land is zoned green or orange".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "18 Kinsey Terrace. White zoned land".
A map showing likely residential land availability in the Eastern Waimakariri district.
A page banner promoting a lift-out titled, "Land and new homes".
A page banner advertising a feature titled, 'The Land Report Part 2'.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Kinsey Terrace, now white zoned land".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Kinsey Terrace, now white zoned land".
A map showing the extent of liquefaction-related land damage in Christchurch.
You can see the movement of the curb and drop of land
Claimed as a fishing reserve by the Tuahiwi chief Te Aika but sold by government, this area used to have eel weirs and eel drying. The land within the horseshoe lake also contains an urupā (cemetery).
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "1 Kinsey Terrace, now white zoned land".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "1 Kinsey Terrace, now white zoned land".