Skip to main content

Romania set to start Sebes-Turda motorwa construction

Construction of the proposed Sebes-Turda motorway will start by the end of November, according to Eugen Cecan, director of Romania’s Regional Administration for Roads and Bridges. Cecan made the announcement in Cluj, the second most populous city in Romania after the capital Bucharest and considered the unofficial capital to the historic province of Transylvania. Cost of the 70km project is around US$500.34 million (€400 million), with 85% coming from the European Union as grants and the central gover
November 7, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Construction of the proposed Sebes-Turda motorway will start by the end of November, according to Eugen Cecan, director of Romania’s Regional Administration for Roads and Bridges.

Cecan made the announcement in Cluj, the second most populous city in Romania after the capital Bucharest and considered the unofficial capital to the historic province of Transylvania.

Cost of the 70km project is around US$500.34 million (€400 million), with 85% coming from the 1116 European Union as grants and the central government investing the remaining 15%.

Cecan said the motorway will be completed by March 2016 and run north from Sebes, with a population of around 25,000, to Turda with a population of 45,000.

Sebes is at the crossroads of two main highways in Romania: E68 European route - DN1 coming from Sibiu and going towards Deva and E81 European route - DN7 coming from Sibiu and going towards Alba-Iulia and Cluj.

Construction work on the motorway is split into four contracts, awarded last year.

Lot 1 – 17km from the highway entrance near the interchange with the A1 motorway at Sebeș to Paraul Iovului – was awarded to the Italian consortium 7809 Salini Impregilo at a cost of nearly $151 million (539,488,704 lei).

Lot 2, around 24km from Paraul Iovului to Aiud, was awarded to an Italian-Romanian consortium that includes RCM Costruzioni, Shelter Construct and Eurocerad International for nearly $128.5 million (460,019,270 lei).

The 12.5km Lot 3 section from Aiud to the Decea interchange is being built by the consortium of Tirrena Scavi and Societa Italiana per Condotte d'Acqua at a cost of cost of $117.5 million (420,511,921 lei).

Lot 4, around 16km from the Decea interchange to the interchange with the A3 motorway near Turda, was awarded to the Romanian division of 3976 Porr Group, Porr Construct SRL, German division Porr Bau, for a cost of $131.4 million (470,004,894 lei).

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Strasbourg bypass surveys halted over environmental concerns
    September 27, 2017
    Further delays are looming for construction of the western Strasbourg bypass, a controversial toll motorway project in north eastern France. The government is concerned about environmental issues after Arcos, the wholly-owned subsidiary of Vinci responsible for building the bypass, said it was going to carry out field surveys in 1.5 hectares of what many consider environmentally sensitive areas.
  • Deutsche Bank and Akbank among banks to fund Gebze-Izmir motorway
    March 19, 2015
    A final financing agreement for Turkey's 421km Gebze-Izmir motorway project will be signed by nine banks, eight of which will be Turkish, in April. The agreement will be for around US$4.73 billion of the deal likely to cost in total more than $6 billion and which is the country’s largest public-private partnership project. The banks are Deutsche Bank and Turkish banks Akbank, Garanti Bankasi, Finansbank, Is Bankasi, Halkbank, Ziraat Bankasi, Yapi Kredi and Vakfbank. Work has been going on since 2010 for the
  • Italian JV wins Denmark’s Storstrom Bridge construction deal
    October 27, 2017
    An Italian joint venture has won the construction contract for Denmark’s replacement 4km-long road and rail Storstrom Bridge. The Danish Road Directorate – Vejdirektoratet - awarded the work to contractors Itinera, Condotte and Grandi Lavori Fincosit along with bridge design consultant Seteco Ingegneria as a subcontractor. Estimated cost is around €280 million for the 26m-wide single-support cable-stay structure. The European Union will subsidise the work to around €15 million.
  • Kazakhstan’s London road show woos consortia for Almaty ring road
    March 2, 2015
    Kazak and EBRD officials visited London to highlight the possibility of a public-private partnership under the country’s revised PPP legal framework. David Arminas reports. To build a road, you go on the road, and that is what Kazakhstan did in London in mid-December. Representatives of more than 100 organisations, a mix of construction companies and financial institutions, attended the roadshow-style presentation to attract foreign capital for BAKAD, the Almaty Ring Road Concession. The message was that Ka