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Ruins of the CTV Building, 24 February 2011. The CTV Building was designed and constructed in about 1986. [1] [4] Christchurch City Council gave building consent in September 1986. [5] Building codes for earthquake design changed frequently in New Zealand following the 1931 Hawke's Bay earthquake (in 1935, 1965, 1976, 1984 and 1992). [6]
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 18:01, 18 October 2017: 2,308 × 3,462 (656 KB): VortBot: Uploading higher resolution from Flickr: 10:59, 5 March 2011
The CTV Building post-earthquake (24 February 2011) The six-story CTV Building [1] located at 249 Madras Street, on the Cashel Street corner (), collapsed in the 22 February 2011 Christchurch earthquake [7] and CTV lost transmission. CTV's main studios were destroyed and the building's lift cavity, the main part of the structure left upright ...
New Year's Eve ball drop live stream A Times Square Alliance live feed kicked off the coverage from the Crossroads of the World at 6 p.m. and stayed up as the clock struck midnight.
In colloquial usage, "Centre Street" may refer to the several courts or government offices along the street in the vicinity of Foley Square. 1 Centre Street is the Manhattan Municipal Building, 40 Centre Street is the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse (home of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit), 60 and 80 Centre ...
CTV Building was the headquarters of Canterbury Television in Christchurch, New Zealand. CTV Building may also refer to one of the following buildings associated with the CTV Television Network in Canada: 299 Queen Street West in downtown Toronto; 9 Channel Nine Court in the Scarborough district of Toronto; 750 Burrard Street in Vancouver
In 2003, co-founders Seth Unger and Arick Wierson – both aides to Mayor of New York City Michael Bloomberg – launched NYC-TV, which replaced "Crosswalks Television". Unger and Wierson set out to create a slew of new, slickly-produced shows about life in New York, alongside live coverage of NYC press conferences and hearings. [5] [6]
The figures were purchased by the government of New York City in 1906 and originally flanked the Centre Street entrance to the Surrogate's Courthouse; they were removed in early 1960 for the widening of Centre Street and an expansion of the underlying platforms of the New York City Subway's Brooklyn Bridge–City Hall station and were then ...