The south-east corner of Manchester Street and Cashel Street.
The corner of Hereford Street and High Street.
A view of High Street from the corner of Hereford Street.
A poster on a Salisbury Street bollard reads, "It's all right to feel overwhelmed some days".
The intersection of Lichfield Street, High Street and Manchester Street.
A cleared property on Seabreeze Close, Bexley.
A slumped wooden boardwalk along New Brighton Road
The north-west corner of Cashel Street and Manchester Street.
A new exhibition is simply called " 37". The show is by the photographer Doc Ross, features 37 Christchurch people captured on film using a 37 second exposure. The aim: to reflect the length of time their city shook during February 2011's devastating earthquake. Katy Gosset hears some of the stories behind the exhibition and hits the streets to record her own take on the 37 second concept.
A bunch of flowers laid beside the Avon River during the River of Flowers event held in Riccarton Bush, commemorating the second anniversary of the 22 February earthquake. The photographer comments, "The organisers told me these were brought by an elderly South African woman. She had a disability so couldn't make it down to the riverbank herself, so she asked the organisers to throw them in on her behalf".
A video of an interview with Tracey McKeefrey about her leaky house. McKeefrey and her family have been living in the house since the 22 February 2011 earthquake, despite the fact that over 300 litres of water comes through the house every wet day. The property has been classified as TC3 but the family still does not know if it will be repaired or rebuilt.
Shows a throng of sex workers rushing back following the announcement that 'Manchester Street's open!'. Prior to the Christchurch earthquake in February 2011 Manchester Street was the focus of street prostitution. On 13 April 2013 the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA) announced: 'A temporary change to the cordon tonight sees Manchester Street open all the way through for the first time in over two years'. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Roger Sutton, former chief executive of the the power lines company, Orion and since June 2011 Chief Executive Officer of the Canterbury Earhquake Recovery Authority, is shown in a straitjacket, raving. An unseen interviewer asks him how it feels after 'two years in the job'. Roger Sutton's work in leading the Earthquake Authority after the February earthquake was extremely stressful, considering the magnitude of the task. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
A view of High Street from the corner of Hereford Street.
A view of Cashel Street, looking west, from the corner of Manchester Street.
Corner of Hereford Street and Manchester Street. A digger remains on the former site of Cash Converters.
Scaffolding around MSC House on Lichfield Street. Part of the building's facade has fallen away.
Weeds are growing through cracks in the pavement outside abandoned properties on Seabreeze Close, Bexley.
A view towards Cathedral Square from the corner of Hereford Street and High Street.
Repair work being done to the Victoria Clock Tower on the corner of Montreal Street and Victoria Street.
A view of Manchester Street, looking north from the intersection of Cashel Street and Manchester Street.
An over-grown hedge along an abandoned property on Waireka Lane, Bexley.
Mounds of liquefaction at an abandoned property on Waireka Lane, Bexley.
The corner of Hereford Street and Manchester Street, which was formerly the site of the Manchester Courts building.
A view of Manchester Street, looking south, from the corner of Manchester Street and Hereford Street. On the left is the former site of the Manchester Courts building, and on the right the former site of Cash Converters.
A poster on a Salisbury Street bollard reads, "It's all right to feel proud of how we've coped".
A poster on a Salisbury Street bollard reads "It's all right to feel a little blue now and then".
Repair work being done to the Victoria Clock Tower on the corner of Montreal Street and Victoria Street.
The north-west corner of Manchester Street and Cashel Street.
A mural on the corner of Peterborough Street and Colombo Street reads "Isn't it wonderful that nobody need waste a single moment to improve the world".