Skip to main content

Angolan project wins IRF Construction Methodology Award

Engineering firm Exergia completes vital communication route using innovative construction methodology. The devastation caused by a 35-year armed conflict has led to a high state of degradation of Angola’s network of roads and bridges, presenting a significant impediment to the country’s recovery. In 2002, the Government of Angola created an extensive rehabilitation and reconstruction program of the road system. As part of this program, the rehabilitation of National Highway 120, the main road linking
June 14, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Exergia Engineer Pedro Malho receives the award from IRF Chairman Abdullah Al-Mogbel

Engineering firm Exergia completes vital communication route using innovative construction methodology

The devastation caused by a 35-year armed conflict has led to a high state of degradation of Angola’s network of roads and bridges, presenting a significant impediment to the country’s recovery. In 2002, the Government of Angola created an extensive rehabilitation and reconstruction program of the road system. As part of this program, the rehabilitation of National Highway 120, the main road linking the capital city of Luanda with Huambo, one of the largest cities, was deemed a national priority. Lisbon-based engineering firm and 2462 IRF Member 4099 Exergia was appointed to run this project.

Since this road is used mainly by heavy goods vehicles, its rehabilitation had to be conducted with minimum impacts on commercial traffic. It was also necessary to overcome the shortage of materials and technical resources available, as well as the lack of a skilled national workforce qualified to deliver the work. Thus, efforts were made to adapt
construction methodologies to the materials available locally, accompanied by strict validation and laboratory control to ensure quality and performance. Local workforce was used wherever possible, creating an exponential increase  in employment among the affected communities.

Care was also taken to carry out the rehabilitation of the road to meet and improve upon the original design. Exergia began by carrying out a thorough inspection of the conditions of the existing bridges and bridge supports so that the different components of projects were carried out in the correct order.  Where possible existing structures were used, restoring them to ensure their reliability, and changes were introduced to ensure a higher level of traffic safety. 

The opening of the Luanda - Huambo link has allowed people access to essential supplies of food, clothing and healthcare and has resulted in an exponential growth of the services and industries in the cities it serves.
Are you up for the challenge ?

Since the launch of the GRAAs, IRF has awarded more than 90 projects in thirty countries for their highest recognition, while highlighting how road programs help achieve broader development goals.  IRF is now taking applications across 11 categories: submit your entry in the 2012 GRAA competition is May 31, 2012. Find out more here:

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.irfnews.org/awards GRAA competition false http://irfnews.org/awards false false%>.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Kosovo motorway wins IRF award
    May 30, 2013
    Kosovo’s Route 7 Motorway is an 84km dual carriage motorway that will span Kosovo from the southwest border with Albania to the capital city of Pristina, tying the heart of Kosovo to the Albanian port city of Durres. This motorway is part of the pan-European motorway network for Southeast Europe and provides a key trade corridor. In November 2011, Bechtel-Enka General Partnership (BEGP) successfully delivered 38km to the people of Kosovo, only 19 months after the contract award. The second main achievement
  • IRF Global Road Achievements award
    February 14, 2012
    IRF is now accepting entries for the 2010 edition of its annual awards competition, the Global Road Achievement Awards (GRAA). The deadline for submission of projects is 31 May, 2010. IRF began this prestigious annual programme as a means to publicise the benefits the road industry makes to global economies and the positive impact road development has on societies around the world. Since the launch of the competition in 2000, more than 70 projects from two dozen countries have been recognised for their cont
  • IRF’s GRAA awards applications deadline
    June 23, 2014
    Applications for this year’s International Road Federation (IRF) Global Road Achievement Awards (GRAA) had to be in by Monday 30 June 2014. GRAA is a one-of-a-kind competition to recognise innovative road projects and exemplary people that place the road industry at the forefront of worldwide social and economic development. The IRF views the awards as an important way to promote road innovation around the world and will make substantial efforts to see that the awarded achievements receive maximum wor
  • Aceh Road Rehabilitation project wins key IRF GRAA award
    May 15, 2014
    The 9.1 magnitude earthquake and resulting series of tsunamis that struck Sumatra, Indonesia, in 2004 destroyed communities in 11 countries. Hardest hit was the Indonesian province of Aceh; an estimated 174,000 people were killed and 500,000 displaced. Basic infrastructure was left in ruin while the primary road along the west coast was destroyed. Vehicles making the trip had to navigate unpaved gravel roads, one-lane temporary bridges, and improvised ferries. Given the cataclysmic events that devastated th