Skip to main content

Norway’s E10 project is officially underway

Hålogalandsvegen/Skanska will finance, build, maintain and operate a section of the E10 Hålogalandsvegen and Highway 85 Tjeldsund–Gullesfjordbotn–Langvassbukt north of the Arctic Circle.
By David Arminas August 7, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Transport Minister Jon-Ivar Nygård at the controls of an excavator, helped by a Skanska employee, on site of the E10 Tjeldsund-Gullesfjordbotn-Langvassbukt road project (image courtesy Erik Betten/State Road Administration)

Construction of Norway’s largest transport project, the E10 Tjeldsund-Gullesfjordbotn-Langvassbukt road, officially got underway this month, according to Statens vegvesen, the country’s national road agency.

Near Fiskefjord in the Tjeldsund municipality, transport minister Jon-Ivar Nygård took the controls of an excavator in a ceremonial start to the project that is part of European Route E10. But actual construction had started in March 2023 through early works agreements and is scheduled to be fully completed in December 2028. Also at the ceremony was says Stein Ivar Hellestad, chief executive of Skanska Norge.

The E10 is an important road westward to Lofoten and Vesterålen from the main E6 road. The PPP project will upgrade the road standards and shorten the E10 from Tjeldsund Bridge to Gullesfjordbotn by around 30km to cut the travel time on the entire section by 39 minutes. E10 is designed to strengthen the links between Lofoten, Vesterålen Harstad/Narvik Airport and the E6, supporting the integration of the wider region.

Skanska Norge, through the company’s special purpose company Hålogalandsvegen, and its subcontractors, will maintain and operate the road until November 2043, after which it will be handed over the Statens vegvesen.

Norwegian global consulting engineering and architectural firm Multiconsult, together with Aas-Jakobsen and ViaNova as subconsultants, is the main designer for Skanska. Financial consultancy PwC’s Norway business advised on the appointment of Skanska to build the E10 Tjeldsund-Gullesfjordbotn-Langvassbukt road which will connect the Lofoten Islands to the mainland.

Earlier this year, the Nordic Investment Bank signed agreed a loan to co-finance the 21-year public-private partnership between the Statens vegvesen (Norwegian Public Road Administration) and Hålogalandsvegen. Skanska will finance, build, maintain and operate a section of the E10 Hålogalandsvegen and Highway 85 Tjeldsund–Gullesfjordbotn–Langvassbukt north of the Arctic Circle.

In a statement, the bank noted that the €86 million loan covers construction of 82km of new and upgraded road, seven rock tunnels with a total length of 27km and several bridges with lengths ranging from 20m to 200m. The project will also include pedestrian and cycle routes and general improvements to local public transport facilities, laybys, rest areas and access roads.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Hungary’s national road development boom gathers pace
    January 7, 2014
    Hungary is experiencing a road development boom. In line with the country's New Szechenyi Plan (USZT), some €3.67 billion (HUF 1.1 trillion) is to be made available for road development works. National infrastructure development company NIF says it launched road projects worth a total of €1.5 billion (HUF 450 billion) in 2013. Contracts have been signed for the full amount. Hungary's M4 motorway is to be opened in 2016 between Abony and Fegyvernek. The 29km motorway section will also include a bridge over
  • Massey Tunnel project to be Design-Build-Finance-Operate-Maintain
    January 25, 2016
    The provincial British Columbia government in western Canada has chosen a Design-Build-Finance-Operate-Maintain (DBFOM) procurement model for the Vancouver region’s 10-lane bridge replacement for the ageing Massey Tunnel. The US$2.5 billion project includes a bridge and related Highway 99 improvements between Bridgeport Road in the adjacent city of Richmond and Highway 91 in the city of Delta. The 60-year-old tunnel now carries its limit of 80,000 vehicles a day and is often congested during rush hours.
  • Ambitious road tunnelling projects around the world
    November 29, 2013
    The construction of the world’s longest subsea road tunnel in Norway and a vital new link under the Bosphorus Strait in Turkey are among a host of exciting, major road tunnel-based projects currently being undertaken across the globe. Guy Woodford reports Sandvik DTi series tunnelling jumbos are being used for the excavation of Solbakktunnel, set to become the world’s longest subsea road tunnel.
  • New South Wales is seeking financial packers for WestConnex in Sydney
    June 19, 2015
    Investment bank Goldman Sachs will soon be sending out expressions of interest for backers to finance Australia’s biggest road deal, the three-stage WestConnex project to be rollout by the New South Wales government. According to a report by The Australian newspaper, initially around US$1.17 billion will be needed for the first phase of the Sydney toll road project. The first phase will likely cost between nearly $2.35 billion and $3.9 billion. Total cost of all three phases over 10 years could be as