Page 7 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 22 August 2013.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 4 February 2014.
Page 5 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 11 January 2014.
Page 19 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 19 February 2014.
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Monday 12 August 2013.
A photograph of large wooden flowers erected on an empty site in Kaiapoi.
A photograph of painted fence palings at the Gap Filler Butterfly Gap site.
A photograph of large wooden flowers erected on an empty site in Kaiapoi.
A photograph of the site of a demolished building at 231 Kilmore Street.
A photograph of the site of a demolished building at 231 Kilmore Street.
A video of an interview with Julia Morison, a Christchurch-based artist, about her sculptures in a vacant site on the Christchurch central city. The artwork, titled 'Tree Houses for Swamp Dwellers', took over a year to make and will act as a centrepiece for the Scape Public Art festival, which begins on 27 September 2013. The sculpture was designed to provide a playground for children and a shady spot for workers on their lunch breaks. Morison also talks about how the sculpture was designed to be relocated and reconfigured so that it can be moved to a new location when construction begins on the vacant site.
The demolition site of the Gallery Apartments building, situated behind the Christchurch Art Gallery.
A cordon fence around an empty site left after the demolition of a building.
Demolition sites and rubble across from Latimer Square, near the corner of Hereford Street.
Demolition sites and rubble across from Latimer Square, near the corner of Hereford Street.
Demolition sites and rubble across from Latimer Square, near the corner of Hereford Street.
The demolition site of the Gallery Apartments building, situated behind the Christchurch Art Gallery.
A view down Hereford Street, with a cordoned-off demolition site on the left.
A picnic bench on an empty site left after the demolition of a building.
This study investigates the uncertainty of simulated earthquake ground motions for smallmagnitude events (Mw 3.5 – 5) in Canterbury, New Zealand. 148 events were simulated with specified uncertainties in: event magnitude, hypocentre location, focal mechanism, high frequency rupture velocity, Brune stress parameter, the site 30-m time-averaged shear wave velocity (Vs30), anelastic attenuation (Q) and high frequency path duration. In order to capture these uncertainties, 25 realisations for each event were generated using the Graves and Pitarka (2015) hybrid broadband simulation approach. Monte-Carlo realisations were drawn from distributions for each uncertainty, to generate a suite of simulation realisations for each event and site. The fit of the multiple simulation realisations to observations were assessed using linear mixed effects regression to generate the systematic source, path and site effects components across all ground motion intensity measure residuals. Findings show that additional uncertainties are required in each of the three source, path, and site components, however the level of output uncertainty is promising considering the input uncertainties included.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building in Edgeware.
A map showing the site of a proposed expansion of the University of Otago's medical school.
A photograph of the site of the demolished buildings at 245-251 Ferry Road.
A man stops to take a look at a site where a building has crumbled.
A man stops to take a look at a site where a building has crumbled.
The site where a building once stood has been turned into a Wilson's car park.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building in Edgeware.
Flowers blooming in a vacant site left by the demolition of a building in Edgeware.
Looking through the cordon fence, an empty site left after the demolition of a building.
Flowers on the fence around the empty site where the CTV building used to be.