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- dc.title
- Catherine's earthquake story, February 2012
- dc.description
- Catherine's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
- Date
- 1:00pm 29th February 2012
- dc.title
- Jessica Lovell's earthquake story, February 2012
- dc.description
- Jessica Lovell's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
- Date
- 1:00pm 27th February 2012
- dc.title
- Chris's earthquake story, January 2012
- dc.description
- Chris's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
- Date
- 1:00pm 26th January 2012
- dc.title
- Jennifer Middendorf's earthquake story, January 2012
- dc.description
- Jennifer Middendorf's earthquake story, captured by the UC QuakeBox project.
- Date
- 1:00pm 18th January 2012
- dc.title
- BeckerFraserPhotos December 2011 photograph 1235
- dc.description
- A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Residential properties on Alice Street in the Horseshoe Lake district". Road cones on the side of the road have been decorated with tinsel for Christmas.
- Date
- 1:47am 15th December 2011
- Tags
- RedZoneApp, Burwood, Horseshoe Lake, residential red zone, Christmas, Alice Street
- dc.title
- Hurunui District engineering lifelines project: Natural hazard assessment
- dc.description
- This report was the first report in the district series, and has a different format to later reports. It includes all natural hazards, not only earthquake hazards. It describes earthquake, flooding, meteorological, landslide and coastal hazards within Hurunui district and gives details of historic events. It includes district-scale (1:250,000) active fault and flood hazard maps. See Object Overview for background and usage information.
- Creator(s)
- Geotech Consulting Ltd
- Date
- 1:00pm 1st November 2000
- dc.title
- Gap Filler Project 07: Think Differently Book Exchange
- dc.description
- The Think Differently Book Exchange is an internationally recognised community project that encourages members of the public to participate in a book exchange scheme. Gap Filler set up a fridge on an abandoned building site in the city centre with a yellow path leading up to the door. Passers-by are invited to take a book, or come back later and leave one.
- dc.title
- Focus360 Panoramas: Kaiapoi - Williams Street and Sewell Street
- dc.description
- Interactive 360-degree panoramic photographs taken in Kaiapoi, at the intersection of Williams Street and Sewell Street.
- dc.title
- Photographs of Rhodes Memorial Home, 34 Dyers Pass Road
- dc.description
- Photographs of Rhodes Memorial Home, 34 Dyers Pass Road, commissioned by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust.
- dc.title
- Photographs of 273 Montreal Street
- dc.description
- Photographs of 273 Montreal Street, commissioned by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust.
- dc.title
- Jeff Field's memories from the 1970s
- dc.description
- Scanned copies of black and white photographs, together with videos of Jeff Field sharing his memories of the UCSA.
- dc.title
- Structure and Governance
- dc.description
-
Challenges over the funding of Christchurch's horizontal infrastructure repair programme, how it was shared, and how to assure value for taxpayers and ratepayers, shaped and reshaped the governance structure of SCIRT.
How do you govern a multi-billion dollar rebuild of horizontal infrastructure to ensure value for money results for taxpayers and ratepayers after a series of destructive earthquakes?
What power and decision-making structures, policies and processes do you put in place to make critical decisions about funding of the repairs and oversight of their implementation?
Facing a rebuild of huge scale, the Government opted for an alliance model as a delivery vehicle capable of managing the complexity of the largest civil construction rebuild programme in New Zealand history.
However the self-governing alliance model would early on be confronted by multiple issues:
- Undefined scope of works because much of the damaged infrastructure was difficult and time-consuming to inspect.
- Funding uncertainty in the absence of a defined scope so it was difficult to estimate total programme cost and secure funding accordingly.
- Multiple asset owners and contractors in the alliance made alignment in governance and on funding issues particularly challenging.
- Competing priorities for the asset owners meant the rebuild of horizontal infrastructure was one of several priorities at the time.
- Cost sharing between the three funding organisations caused considerable tension with most of the assets owned by the Christchurch City Council.
Refer to the attachment document "The Governance of SCIRT - the exercise of control" which describes how SCIRT and its eight alliance participants were required to adapt and adjust governance in order to navigate their way through these challenges and changing priorities.
Glossary terms
- CGG - Client Governance Group
- HIGG - Horizontal Infrastructure Governance Group
- OAG - Office of the Auditor-General
- NZTA - NZ Transport Agency
- CERA - Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority
- CSA - Cost-Sharing Agreement
- IPSG - Infrastructure Programme Steering Group
- IPCT - Infrastructure Programme Coordination Team
- AFG - Audit Framework Group
- IPTG - Infrastructure Programme Transition Group
- IRTSG - Infrastructure Rebuild Technical Standards and Guidelines
- dc.title
- Hamish Allan's Paintings
- dc.description
-
A collection of paintings created by artist Hamish Allan. Allan has the following to say about this collection:
These eight paintings were completed after the 2010/2011 Christchurch earthquakes and during the countless aftershocks. Myself and my family lived and worked through this period and these paintings reflect my immediate and wider environment and my response to the social and physical environs.
My studio and home was only damaged moderately so I was able to continue to produce work and exhibit work in local exhibitions which occurred despite and in response to the devastation.
All of the building featured are demolished or are to be demolished. Shipping containers, road cones and heavy machinery appeared overnight and quickly overwhelmed the city and became part of the new landscape.
Sections were cleared of houses and in some cases the fences and gardens were left and maintained by the locals or owners which emphasised the uninhabited, vacant areas of the city.
Flora and fauna flourished while Christchurch embarked on the rebuild. People suffered, people left, people stayed. As I write this five years on I am still living and working from the same property and am heartened and encouraged to see the city continue to revive, rebuild and blossom around me and my community remains healthy and emboldened by a sense of shared experience, achievement, and loss, with much to accomplish and to look forward to.
- dc.title
- All Right? Research and Evaluation: Annual Research - Taking the Pulse
- dc.description
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PDF documents containing research findings from 2013 - 2017. The research was conducted across greater Christchurch to inform and evaluate the All Right? Campaign.
- dc.title
- Press Infographics March 2012
- dc.description
- Infographics created by The Press in March 2012.
- dc.title
- Photographs of CityUps: Antigravity
- dc.description
- Photographs of Antigravity, a temporary installation which was created by students from the University of Auckland, in partnership with Cakes by Anna. Antigravity was part of CityUps - a 'city of the future for one night only', and the main event of FESTA 2014.
- dc.title
- All Right? Resources: Screensavers
- dc.description
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This collection contains images designed for use as a downloadable screensavers.
The images are from phase two of the All Right? campaign. This phase sought to introduce Cantabrians to the 'Five Ways to Wellbeing. For more information, see 'All Right? Five Ways to Wellbeing: https://quakestudies.canterbury.ac.nz/store/collection/973
- dc.title
- About All Right? Communications
- dc.description
- All Right? newsletters, media releases and articles.
- dc.title
- 280 High Street
- dc.description
- Images and a brief history about a building that was located at 280 High Street. These were used to build the CityViewAR application, where people can walk around the city, and use their mobile devices to see pictures and written information about the buildings before they were demolished.
- dc.title
- Quake City
- dc.description
- Material relating to a Transitional Cities project, titled 'Quake City'. The project description reads, "A transitional experience based in the central city to meet the needs of locals and tourists for a continuing display to explain the Canterbury earthquakes and the impact these had on not only the buildings and land, but also on the community".