Since we gathered late in the morning, we took a walk around the nearby Avon River and Cathedral Square after breakfast, once again gaining a better understanding of the reconstruction of Christchurch after the Great Earthquake. Despite the ruins, the slow pace of reconstruction and criticism, we still see the efforts of the New Zealand people to rebuild their homes. Large-scale cartoon figure paintings are posted on the walls where people go to the empty buildings. Huge model sofas are placed beside the empty sites where ruins have been cleared. New building steel frame supports are uprooted. Buildings that need to be repaired but are not yet taken care of are covered with fences depicting the image of Antarctic penguins. Although there are not many pedestrians in the newly revived urban center, the construction foundation is basically busy. In order to prevent the flying of the ash layer, any operation with the nature of flying dust should cooperate with sprinkling water at the same time. From this tiny detail, we can see the implementation of civilized construction. Along the way, we watched a small section of the Avon River flowing through the city, and we watched the old-fashioned tracked sightseeing cars that had not yet opened.