The Town Hall, with broken windows covered in sheeting and wooden battens.
View into the CBD from Peterborough Street.
View into the CBD from Peterborough Street.
View into the CBD from Peterborough Street.
A photograph of an empty site on Manchester Street.
A photograph looking north down Manchester Street.
A photograph looking north down Manchester Street.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Looking east towards the CBD over Hagley Park".
Organisations locate strategically within Business Districts (CBDs) in order to cultivate their image, increase their profile, and improve access to customers, suppliers, and services. While CBDs offer an economic benefit to organisations, they also present a unique set of hazard vulnerabilities and planning challenges for businesses. As of May 2012, the Christchurch CBD has been partially cordoned off for over 14 months. Economic activity within the cordoned CBD, which previously contained 6,000 businesses and over 51,000 workers, has been significantly diminished and organisations have been forced to find new ways of operating. The vulnerabilities and resilience of CBDs not only influences outcomes for CBD organisations, but also the broader interconnected (urban/regional/national) system. A CBD is a hub of economic, social, and built infrastructure within a network of links and nodes. When the hub is disrupted all of the people, objects, and transactions that usually flow into and out of the hub must be redirected elsewhere. In an urban situation this means traffic jams in peripheries of the city, increased prices of commercial property, and capital flight; all of which are currently being faced in Canterbury. This report presents the lessons learned from organisations in CBDs affected by the Canterbury earthquakes. Here we focus on the Christchurch CBD; however, several urban town centres were extensively disrupted by the earthquakes. The statistics and discussion presented in this report are based on the results of an ongoing study conducted by Resilient Organisations (www.resorgs.org.nz). The data was captured using two questionnaire surveys of Canterbury organisations (issued November 2010 and May 2011), interviews with key informants, and in-depth case studies of organisations. Several industry sectors were sampled, and geographic samples of organisations in the Christchurch CBD, Lyttelton, and the Kaiapoi town centre were also collected. Results in this report describing “non-CBD organisations” refer to all organisations outside of the Christchurch CBD, Lyttelton, and Kaiapoi town centres.
The Minister for Earthquake Recovery, Gerry Brownlee, is due to give the government's response to the Christchurch City Council's draft central city plan tomorrow.
A photograph of badly-damaged buildings on High Street, taken from St Asaph Street.
A photograph looking north down Manchester Street. To the left is the roof of a collapsed building.
A photograph of badly-damaged buildings on High Street, taken from St Asaph Street.
A photograph looking north down Manchester Street. To the left is the roof of a collapsed building.
Overgrown flowers in the CBD.
Overgrown flowers in the CBD.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Riccarton Mall looking east over Hagley Park and the CBD to the Estuary".
An electrical substation building in the CBD.
A fence being repainted in the CBD.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "663 Colombo Street".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Sullivan's Bar, 150 Manchester Street".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Triangle Centre, Colombo Street".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The Cambridge Terrace tribute to the Scottish pioneers".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Colombo Street, showing the last remains of the Triangle Centre, BNZ (left), and Millennium Hotel (right, centre, rear)".
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The remains of the Triangle Centre on Colombo Street".
A photograph looking north down Manchester Street. Coloured shipping containers are stacked on the corner of Lichfield Street.
A photograph of a badly-damaged building on St Asaph Street. The front facade has been removed and the building is surrounded by scaffolding.
A digitally manipulated image of a black truck parked outside the Bus Exchange building on Colombo Street. The photographer comments, "Life is always full of surprises".
A photograph of the badly-damaged Odeon Theatre behind a pile of rubble.
A photograph of fallen bricks in front of the badly-damaged Odeon Theatre.