Tag Archives: christchurch

Christchurch Day 4

On my final day in Christchurch Lisa’s parents were heading off in the morning, so we decided to take our rental car and explore the city a bit before heading to the airport in the early evening.

Started the day watching our breath form clouds in the very chilled rental car.

Coffee. Linux. All systems are go!

After brunch, we headed up the Cashmere hills to Victoria Park to stop for some touristy viewing and photographing of the city. After living in Wellington, it’s so weird seeing such a flat city for a change.

Flat land, then snowy mountains, as far as you can see.

View of the CBD itself.

Panorama from Victoria Park looking out over suburbs and mountains.

Panorama from Victoria Park looking out over the CBD.

There's always a cabbage tree popping up somewhere in NZ parks.

After stopping at the park, we headed off and down around the coast to Port Lyttelton, a commercial port supplying Christchurch and the greater South Island region. Whilst it was interesting to go take a look, there’s not really a lot in Lyttelton other than the port, lots of heavy trucks, the longest road tunnel in NZ and one pretty dead looking town.

Heading down towards Lyttelton Harbour

Trains! Boats! All the win!

After cruising through Lyttelton and not finding much, we headed through the road tunnel full of loud thundering trucks, before making our way around to Sumner.

Looks like the Matrix had a rendering glitch and clipped the right side of the traffic light off....

Beachy area

Shipping containers make a great wall to hold up the cliffs - assuming the top container doesn't fall on your car. ;-)

Along a number of sections, shipping containers have been used to hold back the cliff and to stop any falling rubble hitting cars. It appears that the locals have taken to doing art installations on the sides of them, we say a number of walls like the above covered with giant paintings.

Cave in Sumner (can a cave have two open ends? Or is it some kind of funky tunnel?)

Heeeeeeeelp me, I'm siiiinking.

Christchurch CBD just visible in the distance.

Fishing pier in New Brighton... seems kind of pointless, but the locals appear to enjoy it.

Neat sand drawings viewed from the pier.

Some seagulls just chilling....

Brighton is the first suburb (other than the CBD of course) where I really started noticing clear sights of residential buildings having suffered heavily in the quakes –  numerous buildings were badly damaged, not to mention the roads and foot paths.

Poor beat up Brighton

What happened to this traffic island? :-/

Heading back into Christchurch in the afternoon, we passed yet another demolished church – whilst churches are by no means the only victims of the quake, there’s very few that haven’t suffered a lot of damage from what I’ve seen, and their distinctive construction styles make for some interesting photo shoots.

God hates buildings?

We ended up having dinner with some of Lisa’s friends by getting some pizza from Spagalimis in Riccarton and then heading out to the airport.

Spagalicious!

One thing I did notice lots in Christchurch are the numerous hacky heating solutions for bathrooms – a number of houses tend to have small fan heaters bolted to the wall, with the power feed wired into a switch on the wall – I guess it gets cold in the winter….

High tech Christchurch central heating solution.

Returning the rental car was interesting, we pulled into a parking space and a guy in a high viability vest approached offering to take our key – to which I gave him an education about social engineering and how could I validate the identity of some random guy approaching me in the carpark?

If you want a brand new car, I highly recommend going and hanging around the rental car lot in the evening when hurried travelers are pulling in to park, wearing a high visibility vest and offering to take their keys for them.

Lisa thinks I’m a nut, and sure I agree, the probability of such an occurrence in NZ is low, but it doesn’t mean it can’t happen…

 

Overall it was a good trip to Christchurch – not sure I’d live there at this stage, I do love my cities and with the main CBD being down, I think I might get a little bored –  but that being said, it’s got a nice cold climate and isn’t Auckland, which gives it some pretty high points. ;-)

Christchurch Day 3

It’s been a bit of a gap since my last post, unfortunately a large project (think 80 hr week) took away my spare blogging time, so now I’m playing catchup game, with blog_* folders all over my desktop of content to be posted.

Firstly, a couple pictures missed from day 2:

Trying some local brew picked up from a dodgy bottle store along the side of some highway.

Unimpressed kitty cat is unimpressed!

Day 3 in Christchurch was the big day of Lisa’s friend’s wedding, so I decided to excuse myself from the family madness taking place and went for a walk into the CBD to enjoy a coffee before attending the wedding with Lisa.

Hagley Park

Bit small for a river, bit large for a stream?

One thing I really noticed heaps whilst in Christchurch was the insanely annoyingly low angle of the winter sun –  I guess New Zealand’s South Island is getting pretty close to the bottom of the planet so winter angles are going to be a bit low, but I think it would drive me insane trying to live there with the sun always hitting me in the eyes. :-/

Whilst I'm naturally good looking and tool, the sun is amplifying the effect a bit here.

Aside from the sun however, the weather is amazing, with cool, crisp mornings – setting up on the container having a coffee in the chill air is just an amazing feeling, kind of like being back in Wellington again. :-)

Sitting on top of a shipping container, having a coffee, looking out to a giant demolition zone.... Christchurch is WEIRD.

Even the coffee here needs to get a little shaken first. ;-)

I ended up walking back to the motel in Riccarton – I can get around Christchurch pretty quickly on foot, it’s pretty much all flat so easy to go fast and not even work up a sweat.

I see why the bridge was closed now...

I'm a train!! :-D

More shipping container stores in a random suburb.

Thou shalt not pass!

I spent the evening with Lisa, her family and the soon-to-be-wed couple and their friends in the private function space of a pub, enjoying some amazing food and good times.

Lisa scrubs up pretty well :-P

Amazingly good Sumac and Mushroom soup at the wedding. I must find a way to recreate this.

Whilst it's meaty horribleness, I have to like the presentation style.

The tree of light!

Narcissist Jethro loves reflective skylights!

All up a pretty good and laid back day, skipping all the family business and rushing around pre-wedding was quite a good plan, I greatly prefer the company of a fine laptop and a fine coffee than chaos. :-)

Christchurch Day 2

Early start today, Lisa’s family had made bookings for 08:15 (yes, the morning, wtf) at Drexels in Christchurch, so whilst I had to get up early, there was thankfully unlimited coffee and some pretty decent food as well.

I'm unsure of the purpose of this symbol, but yes rental car, it is a bit cold.

mmmmm french toast smothered in butter and maple syrup

After breakfast I ended up going for a trip through Christchurch suburbs with Lisa and her friend, picking up stuff for the wedding, including a stop into the cheese mongers shop, selling both amazing cheeses, but also baking and other tasty snacks.

Cheeeeeeese shop! :-D

Cheese! Delicious cheese!All sorts, including raw milk cheeses.

omgomgomgcheese!

Following our tiki tour around Christchurch suburbs, we headed to the container mall for a mini tweetup with a bunch of Christchurch tweeple.

I really love the container mall, in many ways it would be nice to expand out into other empty lots to get more shops up and running.

Snugglebunny!

Afterwards, we went on another larger wander through and right around the red zone, checking out the extent of the damage – it’s actually a lot worse than I thought yesterday, not just a core of the CBD, but almost the entire thing is being demolished or is already just a rough, empty lot.

This old complex surprisingly looks to have emerged somewhat undamaged from the quake.

The Novatel really stands out - looks like the buildings on both the left and right sides were interconnected and have since been pulled down, leaving this weirdly exposed tower.

A still standing brick buildings, with remnants of the torn off neighbouring building still hanging to it.

Still yet to find a surviving stone church

Love the cardboard cutout workman wearing the high viz vest up in the building.

The building that I saw yesterday sitting alone in an otherwise deserted block looks like it wont be there that much longer – workmen have pulled off the side of the building and are busy tearing out the insides and throwing them down a chute.

A lot of buildings that look OK from the outside are cordoned off or are getting pulled down, so there must be a lot of structural damage that isn’t visible from the street.

IRD's cordoned off building in the background - in front of it, the site of the infamous CTV building.

Arts are still going strong down here, even amongst the rubble.

The staircase to nowhere.

Of all the places that could have fallen down, why not this shithole? :'(

Redzone wasteland

Back of High St

It’s not all demolition though, on our wanders I managed to find some new construction just outside of the red zone – certainly not as much as I expected, but at least it’s starting to take shape.

Some new construction!

Suburban Christchurch is really weird to me, I’m so used to always having suburban places being hilly and varied, but Christchurch is flat blocks as far as you go – it’s kind of reminds me of a higher-population Hawkes Bay.

It’s actually kind of the shame that there’s so much car usage here, this city would be great for a cycling/tram combination – it’s all flat and fairly compact, isn’t totally fucked yet like Auckland and it’s the ideal time for doing major infrastructure changes seeing as most of the CBD is unusable anyway.

Christchurch Day 1

I’ve spent my first day in Christchurch catching up with Lisa’s friends and family, but also went for a short walk from Riccarton, through Hagley park and into what remains of the CBD.

The flight down was all smooth, great view of the southern alps, hopefully on the way back it will be a bit less cloudy so I can get a better view. Christchurch airport has been through a lot of renovations – it’s still ongoing, but it’s very nice, possibly the nicest domestic airports in New Zealand.

Modern Art!

Loving the chill weather down here, it’s about 4 degrees and a lovely fresh chill breeze – as a Wellingtonian who’s been suffering muggy Auckland weather for the past 11 months, it’s absolutely blissful – especially when walking as you don’t get too hot.

Only downside is that you definitely notice the dampness down here in winter, Hagley park was very chill, dark, damp and muddy – kind of like the stereotypical cold harsh park you’d find in a murder movie. :-/

There aren’t many signs of the earthquake damage in Riccarton, but as I walked into the CBD a few more signs of it started appearing – temporary offices that have popped up in prefab modules, the odd empty lot and corner stores holding up their awnings with wooden frames.

Building's OK, but don't trust the awning...

A number of buildings like this are around the city - look structurally OK from the outside, but cordoned off and abandoned.

The bridge of remembrance - looks like it's survived OK, but cordoned off.

Tower block under deconstruction.

As I started getting into the proper CBD, it’s amazing to see how almost all the visible tower blocks have cranes attacking away at them, pulling them down.

Not sure why NZ uses cranes and diggers so much, vs explosives, but I presume there’s some cost or safety reasoning behind it – or maybe for better material recycling?

The container mall is really cute, lots of neat colours, layouts and designs.

Double-layer!

Where did the rest of that building go? O_o

Once in the CBD, you start to realise how much of the city’s core has been taken out of service, it would be like closing all of Lambton Quay and the Terrace in Wellington as well as pockets of Cuba St and Courtney Place.

The deconstruction is still ongoing, when I left the area at 17:30 with the sun fading there were still diggers working away in the background, although not as many as I would have expected.

In many ways I’m surprised that there was so little visible demolition presence – there were the odd person and sign guarding off-limit areas and contractors coming and going, but I was expecting to see hordes of diggers and cranes pulling stuff down.

I guess the methods used tend not to showcase swarms of workers – I don’t think it’s a case of them not working quickly, since I can see the huge amount of the city that’s been cleared, something which would not have been an easy feat.

Anything in brick got totally fucked - I guess there's a reason why there aren't many brick buildings in Wellington...

Look carefully at the building on the right.... or more accurately, the 10% that remains of it.

A lone tower block, surrounded by blocks of cleared rubble

Resembles more of an industrial wasteland than a CBD

There’s a huge amount of empty of space around the CBD – each of these spaces was once a building, it’s hard to comprehend how much has actually collapsed, since most of the rubble has been removed by now, some of the scale is lost.

The CBD has a kind of dystopian feel to it with all the missing buildings, odd piles of rubble and the random boy racer cruising through a deserted street in a low riding car with booming stereo and exhaust, whilst army soldiers stand guard.

Another empty lot, another defacto carpark.

Whilst still standing, there are a number of buildings still pending a demolition.

Shiny tower blocks, with boarded up windows #juxtaposition

I can see why they're going to demolish the cathedral - no way it can simply be repaired with this much damage

After seeing how many brick buildings have collapsed and how badly, I can’t understand for any calls to save the cathedral or any of the other heritage buildings that came down – the earthquake shows that those materials are just too weak and dangerous for the geological conditions here in NZ.

Whilst it’s good to keep some amount of heritage buildings, the only way they’re going to be able to do it here is to build with modern materials and then replicate the look and feel of the heritage architecture, eg cladding a new church in the old one’s bricks, but not using it for load bearing walls.

At the end of the day, people come first – we shouldn’t keep old dangerous designs around just for heritage purposes, civilization is about constant evolution and improvement for the benefit of the living.

Guess the missing shape!

Some buildings are wrecked in some really weird ways - the demolition of the surrounding neighbors does offer a bit of a different view into the architecture of some of these older buildings, including weird additions.

Noooooo Little India is closed :'(

Most of the rubble lots have been cleared, the few that remain tend to have been compacted down

I’ll be getting more of a look around the city over the next few days, but it’s already pretty clear that Christchurch is going to have a massive amount of work cut out for it, to get the CBD back up and running.