Greening the Rubble Launch Event
MEDIA RELEASE
Greening the Rubble and
Make-Shift Public Launch Event
On Sunday 19th
of December between 11:00 am and 2:00 pm, Greening the
Rubble, a post-quake initiative aiming to revitalise urban
spaces, will be launched on the corner of Salisbury and
Victoria Streets. The launch event will be held on the
former site of Asko Design and Carl Watkins Hairdressing,
whose premises were destroyed by the 4th September
earthquake. It marks the beginning of a community project
which will see the sites temporarily landscaped with seating
and native vegetation and other plants while the owners
prepare for site redevelopment in mid 2011.
Wayne
McCallum, Regional Biodiversity Coordinator, and one of the
organisers of the event explains: “Greening the Rubble
is a collaborative project involving land owners and the
wider community, where the objective is to make temporary
use of vacant sites in a way that emphasises
Christchurch’s diversity and resilience, and the
creativity of its people. The project involves a wide range
of partners, including landscape architects, environmental
consultants, plant nursery owners, students and managers of
Unlimited inner city high school, staff from
Environment
Canterbury, Lincoln University and the Christchurch City
Council, as well as members of the general
public.”
This Greening the Rubble project, which is to be run under the umbrella of Living Streets Aotearoa with grant support from Christchurch City Council, forms part of a wider initiative to find temporary uses for empty sites across Christchurch; collectively known as Make-SHIFT. This wider project helps to host the recent Gap-Filler arts and performance activities and projects by pupils from Unlimited Secondary School. More groups are expected to come under this umbrella over the next twelve months.
Rhys Taylor from Living Streets Aotearoa describes Make-SHIFT as “an exciting project to help put some fun and a visual welcome back into the inner city through temporary public use of vacant spaces. We are inviting commercial landowners to contact Living Streets in January with offers of access to sites, for a few weeks or months or up to a year."
Events on Sunday will include Morris dancing, capoeira, music, a barbecue, coffee vendor, and a brief presentation from Greening the Rubble coordinators. The newly announced patron for Make-Shift, Christchurch Mayoress Jo Nicholls-Parker will speak, along with Christchurch mayor, Bob Parker, local MP Nicky Wagner and the site’s owners.
The launch will double as celebration to the end of the International Year of Biodiversity, with free copies of a biodiversity DVD provided by Environment Canterbury, featuring films from the recent MyBiodiversity Film Competition.
For more details of the event, Greening the Rubble and make-SHIFT go to www.canterburybiodiversity.org.nz .
ends