A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets at the entrance to Phillipstown Courts.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets at the entrance to Phillipstown Courts.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets at the entrance to Phillipstown Courts.
A photograph of street art on the sports pavilion and public toilets at Waltham Park.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The artwork depicts three albatrosses.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The artwork is signed by 'Minx'.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The artwork is signed by 'Minx'.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The artwork is signed by 'Minx'.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The artwork is signed by 'Minx'.
A photograph of street art at Waltham Park. The artwork is on the outside of the public toilets on Waltham Road.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The photograph believes that the artwork was created by the artist 'Minx'.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The artwork depicts three albatrosses. Above them is written: "Everyone needs to pee!".
A photograph of street art on the public toilets on Shaw Avenue. The artwork depicts three albatrosses. Above them is written: "Everyone needs to pee!".
A photograph of street art on the side of the public toilets at Waltham Park. The artwork depicts a frog. The word "Happy" has been spray-painted over top of the frog.
A photograph of street art on the side of the public toilets at Waltham Park. The artwork depicts a frog. The word "Happy" has been spray-painted over top of the frog.
The study contributes to a better understanding of utilisation and interaction patterns in post-disaster temporary urban open spaces. A series of devastating earthquakes caused large scale damage to Christchurch’s central city and many suburbs in 2010 and 2011. Various temporary uses have emerged on vacant post-earthquake sites including community gardens, urban agriculture, art installations, event venues, eateries and cafés, and pocket parks. Drawing on empirical data obtained from a spatial qualities survey and a Public Life Study, the report analyses how people used and interacted with three exemplary transitional community-initiated open spaces (CIOS) in relation to particular physical spatial qualities in central Christchurch over a period of three weeks. The report provides evidence that users of post-disaster transitional community-initiated open spaces show similar utilisation and interaction patterns in relation to specific spatial qualities as observed in other urban environments. The temporary status of CIOS did apparently not influence ‘typical’ utilisation and interaction patterns.
This paper explores the responses by a group of children to an art project that was undertaken by a small school in New Zealand after the September 2010 and February 2011 Christchurch earthquakes. Undertaken over a period of two years, the project aimed to find a suitable form of memorialising this significant event in a way that was appropriate and meaningful to the community. Alongside images that related directly to the event of the earthquakes, the art form of a mosaic was chosen, and consisted of images and symbols that clearly drew on the hopes and dreams of a school community who were refusing to be defined by the disaster. The paper 'writes' the mosaic by placing fragments of speech spoken by the children involved in relation to ideas about memory, affect, and the 'sublime', through the work of Jean-Francois Lyotard. The paper explores the mosaic as constituted by the literal and metaphorical 'broken pieces' of the city of Christchurch in ways that confer pedagogic value inscribed through the creation of a public art space by children. AM - Accepted Manuscript