Skip to main content

Alabama highway project - cost increases

Questions are being asked in the US State of Alabama over additional funding being required for an 83km stretch of road.
February 17, 2012 Read time: 1 min
Questions are being asked in the US State of Alabama over additional funding being required for an 83km stretch of road. When the estimates for the Northern Beltline bypass connecting Interstate 20/59 with the 1/59 in southwest Jefferson County was announced in 2009 the project was expected to cost US$3 billion. However the project is now thought to cost $4.7 billion with the existing plans and there are concerns that the price may rise further. Materials costs have risen considerably since the project was first mooted although other cost increases have also affected the plans. Delays may hit the project but it still looks likely to go ahead.

Related Content

  • Funding provided for Colorado Interstate work
    August 24, 2023
    Funding is being provided for Colorado Interstate work
  • Increased use of RAP in asphalt production
    December 8, 2015
    In the US asphalt pavement mix producers are improving the sustainability pro_ le of roads through the incorporation of recycled materials and the use of energy-saving warm-mix asphalt technologies. According to the latest survey of asphalt mix producers conducted by the National Asphalt Pavement Association (NAPA) in partnership with the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), more than 67.65 million tonnes of recycled materials was put to use in new asphalt pavement mixtures during the 2014 construction
  • Costs have climbed for a New Zealand project
    August 13, 2021
    The costs have climbed again for a key New Zealand road project.
  • Protest storm over new US$0.5bn Nevada highway
    August 20, 2012
    The most expensive highway ever built in Nevada will open before the end of August to a storm of protest. The new 13.7km Interstate 580 three-lane motorway, which is reported to have cost more than US $0.5 billion to construct, has been dubbed a vanity project by local politicians.