Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.
Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.
Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.
Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.
Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.ing
A member of the public bowling on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.
Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.ing
Members of the public bowl on the CPIT students' 1950s bowling alley in town.ing
A panorama of Gap Filler Bowling, a 1950s bowling alley designed and built by CPIT students on the site of the JetSet Lounge.
A panorama of Gap Filler Bowling, a 1950s bowling alley designed and built by CPIT students on the site of the JetSet Lounge.
A barbeque at the opening of Gap Bowling, a 1950s bowling alley designed and built by CPIT students on the demolished site of the JetSet Lounge.
A sign made out of plastic cups on wire fencing. The sign reads, "bowling". It was created by students from the CPIT who built a 1950s style bowling alley on this site.
A sign made out of plastic cups on wire fencing. The sign reads, "Gap Filler bowling". It was created by students from the CPIT who built a 1950s style bowling alley on this site.
Students from CPIT on the site of the demolished JetSet lounge. They are building a 1950s style bowling alley for the community to use. They have been photographed from beside the Passing Time sculpture on Wilson Reserve.
Numerous studies have shown that urban soils can contain elevated concentrations of heavy metals (HMs). Christchurch, New Zealand, is a relatively young city (150 years old) with a population of 390,000. Most soils in Christchurch are sub-urban, with food production in residential gardens a popular activity. Earthquakes in 2010 and 2011 have resulted in the re-zoning of 630 ha of Christchurch, with suggestions that some of this land could be used for community gardens. We aimed to determine the HM concentrations in a selection of suburban gardens in Christchurch as well as in soils identified as being at risk of HM contamination due to hazardous former land uses or nearby activities. Heavy metal concentrations in suburban Christchurch garden soils were higher than normal background soil concentrations. Some 46% of the urban garden samples had Pb concentrations higher than the residential land use national standard of 210 mg kg⁻¹, with the most contaminated soil containing 2615 mg kg⁻¹ Pb. Concentrations of As and Zn exceeded the residential land use national standards (20 mg kg⁻¹ As and 400 mg kg⁻¹ Zn) in 20% of the soils. Older neighbourhoods had significantly higher soil HM concentrations than younger neighbourhoods. Neighbourhoods developed pre-1950s had a mean Pb concentration of 282 mg kg⁻¹ in their garden soils. Soil HM concentrations should be key criteria when determining the future land use of former residential areas that have been demolished because of the earthquakes in 2010 and 2011. Redeveloping these areas as parklands or forests would result in less human HM exposure than agriculture or community gardens where food is produced and bare soil is exposed.