Skip to main content

Acrow Bridge seals deal for 144 modular bridges in Zambia

Acrow Bridge, an international bridge engineering and supply company, announced that it will start by the end of the year on a 144-bridge infrastructure project in Zambia. The work will be carried out exclusively by Zambian engineers, technicians and contractors who will be trained in the field by Acrow technicians on the assembly and installation of the bridges. Acrow said it is working with the Road Development Agency of the Republic of Zambia.
August 11, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Acrow Bridge, an international bridge engineering and supply company, announced that it will start by the end of the year on a 144-bridge infrastructure project in Zambia.

The work will be carried out exclusively by Zambian engineers, technicians and contractors who will be trained in the field by Acrow technicians on the assembly and installation of the bridges. Acrow said it is working with the Road Development Agency of the Republic of Zambia.

Acrow Bridge, based just outside New York City, designs, manufactures and supplies prefabricated modular steel bridges for road and rail use and has sales in more than 20 African countries.

“Our partnership with the Zambian government will provide the country’s citizens and businesses with strong and durable bridges, made of American steel and manufactured in the United States to the finest international quality standards,” said Bill Killeen, president and chief executive of Acrow.

“Acrow Bridges are designed to be environmentally sensitive through the manufacturing processes and through the service life of 75 years or more by not needing to be refinished during that time.”

Earlier reports had the deal worth more than US$80 million.

The 1290 Export-Import Bank of the United States is financing the Acrow Bridge development programme through loan guarantees to the Road Development Agency of the Republic of Zambia.

In July, Paul Sullivan, vice president of international business development at Acrow, was appointed a member of the US government’s Trade Advisory Committee on Africa. The Trade Advisory Committee provides advice to the Office of the United States Trade Representative on developing US trade policy throughout sub-Saharan Africa.

US president Barack Obama visited Zambia last month as part of an African tour. While in Zambia, he spoke during the 6th Global Entrepreneurship Summit at the UN headquarters in Gigiri, an event which he co-hosted with Zambian president Uhuru Kenyatta.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • MOBA founder Paul Harms will be “sorely missed” after death aged 82
    March 4, 2013
    Paul G. Harms, founder and long-time managing director of MOBA, has died aged 82. For more than 30 years Harms led and shaped the German firm, from its foundation in 1972 to its current position among leading international companies in mobile automation. Born in 1931 in Osnabrück, Germany, on leaving school Harms completed an apprenticeship as an instrument mechanic then worked as thermal technician for Georgsmarienhütte AG. At the same time, Harms attended technical evening school and then studied mechanic
  • Construction equipment launched at Bauma China
    February 15, 2012
    The 2010 bauma China event did, as expected, break all previous records, with companies launching more new equipment than ever. Patrick Smith reports. The queues at the entrances on the first day of bauma China 2010 indicated what the rest of the week had in store. As thousands of visitors poured through the gates each day to view the latest in construction equipment at the expanded Shanghai New International Expo Centre, the organisers knew they were looking at another successful event.
  • ARTBA requests US president to invest in transportation
    March 5, 2012
    US president Barack Obama has received a highly critical open letter from Pete Ruane, president of the US-based American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). The letter questions the lack of progress in the delivery of a long-term surface transportation bill by the US Government. This bill is now 15 months behind schedule, which has resulted in a knock-on effect for the already struggling US construction sector.
  • Western construction firms operating in developing nations face extra challenges
    January 9, 2024
    Contracting firms carrying out road construction works in developing nations can face extra challenges - Gordon Feller reports