Chris Green has a shower at the Pioneer Centre today
following the magnitude 6.3 earthquake that hit
Christchurch last Tuesday. Photo by NZPA.
After seven days of anguish, there were four minutes of
bliss.
For hundreds of grim and grimy Cantabrians one simple
pleasure was finally accessible today - a shower to at least
wash away some of the discomfort a week after an earthquake
turned their lives upside down.
Spreydon's Pioneer Stadium was one Christchurch location
offering temporary relief in a shipping container turned
ablution block.
Between 9am and 4.30pm the unclean inundated the facility -
relishing the opportunity to feel, as one man, put it "a
thousand times better''.
The container, divided into three male and three female
cubicles, went on stream yesterday; gas heating units were
installed today to enhance the experience.
At full capacity 72 people per hour funnelled through; the
shower curtains were open even later as news spread.
For Herman Toailoa, a supermarket butcher who crossed town
from liquefaction-hit Linwood, the time consuming journey was
worth every second.
It was only five minutes but it was great, he said after he'd
spent the day helping dumping $100,000 worth of rotting meat.
"I heard about it on the radio last night and that was me.''
University of Canterbury psychology graduate Shawn Lim
wandered over from across the street for his first decent
wash for four days.
"I was in my friend's house but they've moved to Masterton
three days ago,'' he said.
The 24-year-old was hit hard by the September 4 quake when
his family home in Mt Pleasant was classified an
uninhabitable, yet that hardship was put into perspective by
the city's next savage quake.
"My professor's dead,'' he said. "She died in the CTV
building.''
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