Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The bicycles that were mounted on the wall of Sol Square, Manchester Street".
A photograph of a fence post that lifted out of the ground during the earthquake, pulling a clump of soil with it.
A view across Williams Street in Kaiapoi to an Egyptian restaurant that has been cordoned off with a safety fence.
A tree in Hagley Park wrapped in tape. The tape reads, "Danger", warning people that the tree is unsafe.
A red sticker on the window of a damaged house. The sticker indicates that the building is unsafe to enter.
A worker watching as his colleague releases the trailer ties that are holding port-a-loos onto a trailer.
A large crack in Robson Avenue in Avonside that has resulted from the 4 September 2010 earthquake.
Some flowers that have fallen over in the garden of a house on Galbraith Avenue in Avonside.
A consent granted by the Christchurch City Council, providing consent to carry out earthquake repair work that may affect protected vegetation.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The bank of containers that protect the Sumner road from falling rocks".
A plastic crate that will be used to hold plants, or as seating at the Pallet Pavilion.
A photograph of damaged buildings on Madras Street. The facade is all that remains of the building on the left.
A photograph of damaged buildings on Madras Street. The facade is all that remains of the building on the left.
A photograph of damaged buildings on Madras Street. The facade is all that remains of the building on the left.
A photograph of empty sections that have been fenced off near the corner of Tuam Street and High Street.
A photograph of a sign indicating that the Civil Defence centre is closed. Information about other agencies is listed.
A close-up photograph of a stuffed penguin that is being stored at the Canterbury Cultural Recovery Centre.
A photograph of road cones around a drain that has been lifted out of the ground on Avonside Drive.
A document which describes the process that SCIRT took to work with industry organisations to develop a civil trade qualification.
A cracked footpath on Sumner Road in Lyttelton. The picnic benches that overlook the harbour have been cordoned off.
This document contains a list of the roles of people that have requested access to the SCIRT GIS viewer.
A document that outlines objectives and ways of working collaboratively, which team members signed to show their commitment.
A plastic crate that will be used to hold plants, or as seating at the Pallet Pavilion.
Creativity that is driven by a need for physical or economic survival, which disasters are likely to inspire, raises the question of whether such creativity fits with conventional theories and perspectives of creativity. In this paper we use the opportunity afforded by the 2010-2013 Christchurch, New Zealand earthquakes to follow and assess the creative practices and responses of a number of groups and individuals. We use in-depth interviews to tease out motivations and read these against a range of theoretical propositions about creativity. In particular, we focus on the construct of “elite panic” and the degree to which this appeared to be evident in the Christchurch earthquakes context. Bureaucratic attempts to control or limit creativity were present but they did not produce a completely blanket dampening effect. Certain individuals and groups seemed to be pre-equipped to navigate or ignore potential blocks to creativity. We argue, using Geir Kaufmann’s novelty-creativity matrix and aspects of Teresa Amabile’s and Michael G. Pratt’s revised componential theory of creativity that a special form of disaster creativity does exist.
A photograph of a red sticker notice on the window of 147 Hereford Street, indicating that the building is unsafe to enter.
A photograph of a crack that runs between two windows of the earthquake-damaged Wheki Building at the University of Canterbury.
A photograph of the result of a liquefaction blister that has been flattened with a power harrow on a farm near River Road in Lincoln.
A photograph of the result of a liquefaction blister that has been flattened with a rotary hoe on a farm near River Road in Lincoln.
An old open fireplace that has been exposed during demolition of the Hillary and Marshall Limited building on Manchester Street.
Bricks that have fallen from the neighbouring building into Woolsack Lane in the central city. Above them, a lamp post has been bent.