Skip to main content

€400 million road and tunnel project in Georgia

Scheme is part of a larger Chinese-backed scheme to connect Armenia and Russia via Georgia.
By Liam McLoughlin May 6, 2025 Read time: 1 min
A rendering of the 426m long and 166m high arched bridge that is part of the Kvesheti-Kobi scheme in Georgia. Image: https://kveshetikobiroad.ge

Work is proceeding on the Kvesheti-Kobi road and tunnel scheme in Georgia.

The scheme is part of a larger project, being carried out with Chinese involvement, to establish a trade route between Russia and Armenia that runs through Georgia.

Funding worth €400 million (GEL1.24bn) for the Kvesheti-Kobi part of the project, which is expected to complete by the end of this year, is coming from the Asian Development Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

Plans for Kvesheti-Kobi section - according to the project's website https://kveshetikobiroad.ge/en/ - include building a 23km two-lane asphalt-concrete road, in addition to five bridges and five tunnels.

The total length of the tunnels is 11.5km, with the longest one being 9km long and 15m in diameter. The tunnel will start in the village Tskere and end in Kobi. The rest of the tunnels will be relatively small (1541m, 194m, 388m and 299m).

The total length of the bridges is 1.6km, with one being a 426m long and 166m high arched bridge, which is the most difficult engineering construction. Its arch is 285m long. The project also includes the construction of four small (322m, 218m, 148m and 42m) bridges.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Zaxis-5s biggest-ever project
    January 27, 2014
    Norwegian contractor Carl C Fon has secured its largest-ever road construction contract to complete a 4.6km section of the E18 in the Mysen region of its home country. It started the €25million project in August 2012 and it is scheduled for completion in the summer of 2014.
  • Additional Argentina-Chile tunnel project proposed
    January 9, 2015
    An agreement has been reached between Chile and Argentina over a long discussed tunnel project. The proposed tunnel would stretch 11.5km and connect Argentina’s Mendoza Province with Chile’s Region VI, with the project having first been mooted as far back as 1992. The cost of the proposed Paso Las Lenas Tunnel has yet to be revealed although the projected route through the Andes Mountains has been announced. The tunnel portals will be some 2,050m above sea level and the project will include the construction
  • Brisbane's highway of distinction
    August 2, 2012
    A massive AU$2 billion update of the Gateway Motorway in Queensland is underway to improve an infrastructure stretched by population boom. Report and photographs by Adrian Greeman Just 20 years after the Australian city of Brisbane built its Gateway Motorway with a high slim signature bridge dominating the river skyline, the road is being completely revamped. Some 12km of urban route on the south of the Brisbane River is being expanded to take much increased traffic levels; the north is getting a completely
  • Seattle’s SR 99 Alaska Way tunnel notches up a tolling success
    February 13, 2020
    The tunnel replaced an ageing viaduct that had suffered earthquake damage.