Skip to main content

Two new tunnel links for Turkey

Two new tunnel connections in Turkey will improve transport in key areas. The new Kemerhisar-Pozanti Highway features tunnels along its length and this key route will improve connections between the country’s capital Ankara and its commercial centre Istanbul as well as to the south-east of the country. The highway will have wider benefits too as it will allow better transportation through Turkey between Europe and the Middle East. And in the busy port city of Izmir, the new Konak Tunnel will reduce jour
August 28, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
The new Konak Tunnel in the port city of Izmir will cut journey times

Two new tunnel connections in Turkey will improve transport in key areas. The new Kemerhisar-Pozanti Highway features tunnels along its length and this key route will improve connections between the country’s capital Ankara and its commercial centre Istanbul as well as to the south-east of the country.

The highway will have wider benefits too as it will allow better transportation through Turkey between Europe and the Middle East. And in the busy port city of Izmir, the new Konak Tunnel will reduce journey times considerably.

Once the tunnel link is complete it will cut congestion between between Konak and Yeildere in the city.

In addition, 2643 Egis has signed a contract for the operation and maintenance of the Gebze-zmir highway in Turkey. The agreement was signed with OTOYOL, the concessionaire for the Turkish General Directorate of Highways (3337 KGM). This is the second major contract award for Egis in Turkey, following the Eurasia Tunnel deal, for a 5.4km twin-deck tunnel under the Bosphorus.

OTOYOL was selected by KGM as the private concessionaire for the project, and is itself a firm established for the purpose of the project by five Turkish companies: 3338 Nurol naat ve Ticaret; Özaltin naat Ticaret ve Sanayi; 3340 Makyol naat Sanayi Turizm ve Ticaret; 4149 Yüksel naat; 3342 Göçay naat Taahhüt ve Ticaret; and one Italian company, 1324 Astaldi.

After a competitive bidding process, Egis was selected by OTOYOL as its operation partner.

Gebze-Izmir Project

The Gebze-zmir Project is a tolled highway project procured by KGM under a build, operate and transfer (BOT) model. This is the largest BOT project in Turkey to date. It includes 420km of highway (2x3 lanes) between Gebze (on the North shore of zmit Bay) and zmir, as well as a 3km suspension bridge crossing zmit bay, three tunnels with a total length of 6km and 20 toll stations.

The project will be implemented in two phases. The first phase from Gebze to km 58 will include the 3km Izmit bay suspension bridge which is one of the longest suspension bridges in the world by the length of central span.

There is considerable requirement in Turkey for additional roads and highways as the country’s vehicle population is growing significantly. The number of registered vehicles in the country increased by 2% in April 2013 to reach 17.35 million, and in the period from January-April 2013, 372,000 new vehicles were registered while 55,000 old vehicles were removed from the registry.

Out of the total 17.35 million vehicles, 51% are passenger cars; 16.4% pick-up trucks; 15.5% motorbikes; 8.8% tractors; 4.3% trucks; 2.3% minibuses; 1.4% coaches; and 0.2% special-use vehicles.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A major highway deal has been awarded by the Bosnian authorities
    May 25, 2012
    Construction work is now going ahead on the Suhodol-Tarcin section of Bosnia’s Corridor Vc highway. The Bosnian Government and highway company Autoceste FBiH Mostar signed a contract with Turkish company Cengiz Insaat Sanayi ve Ticaret for this section of the Corridor Vc highway. The deal is worth €115.2 million and will be for construction of a total of 5km of the motorway. The work is expected to take 28 months to complete. However a consortium of five construction companies from Bosnia and Herzegovina is
  • Highway developments to boost east-west transport
    April 4, 2012
    Huge highway developments are being planned and carried out to further improve East-West transport, with Central Asia a key region as Patrick Smith reports History was made in late 2010, when one of the biggest road building projects ever envisaged in Eastern Europe was given the green-light. It was the occasion when Russian president Dmitry Medvedev signed a law that would allow his country to build its segment of a huge highway around the Black Sea. The idea is to complete the 7,140km highway, wi
  • Turkey's new highway
    February 7, 2012
    Work on Turkey's Istanbul-Izmir highway is now in planning. The US$1 billion project will include a radical suspended bridge, said to be one of the longest of its type.
  • Astaldi expects to close €1.7bn Russian motorway build deal
    May 13, 2014
    Italian civil engineering group Astaldi is expecting to obtain a €1.7 billion contract from Russia that would see them build a 140km stretch of the Moscow-St Petersburg motorway. Astaldi chairman Paolo Astaldi said that the deal for lots seven and eight of the motorway is “probable”. Astaldi is in a consortium with Turkish partner Ictas, with which it has already banked deals in Russia. The contract will be awarded by the motorway concessionaires, VTB and Vinci.