Skip to main content

Strabag’s Dar es Salaam contract

The award of a US$177million construction contract to Austria’s Strabag for a transport project in Tanzania’s capital Dar es Salaam in late February has raised the hopes of the city becoming the first in the region to modernise urban transport through elimination of minibuses and private cars from the city centre. This will pave the way for the introduction of improved high- capacity buses (with capacity of 140 passengers) that would use non-polluting energy, hence reducing air pollution in this city of 2.
June 14, 2012 Read time: 1 min
The award of a US$177million construction contract to Austria’s 945 Strabag for a transport project in Tanzania’s capital Dar es Salaam in late February has raised the hopes of the city becoming the first in the region to modernise urban transport through elimination of minibuses and private cars from the city centre.

This will pave the way for the introduction of improved high- capacity buses (with capacity of 140 passengers) that would use non-polluting energy, hence reducing air pollution in this city of 2.8 million people.

This six-phase project bus-based mass transit system, DAR Rapid Transit Agency, will involve the construction of a total of 130.3km of improved roads with exclusive lanes for the high- capacity buses.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tanzania delivers road construction boost
    November 2, 2012
    Plans to upgrade two major roads in Tanzania will bring huge benefits to the East African nation. Shem Oirere reports Tanzania’s bid to retain or improve its position as East Africa’s second largest economy is gaining momentum as the government moves to support the achieved growth and contribute more to ongoing regional economic integration through the improvement of its transport infrastructure. The country received a major boost in April, 2012, when the African Development Bank (AfDB), one of Tanzania lea
  • Tanzania toll roads development
    November 6, 2024
    Tanzania’s largest city to see toll roads development?
  • Kenya moves ahead with double-decker road to address costly city traffic jams
    December 11, 2013
    New double deck roads could cut congestion in Kenyan capital Nairobi – Shem Oirere reports Arapid increase in urban population and diminishing land for infrastructure expansion has forced Kenya to devise ways of addressing the worsening human and vehicular traffic problems in its capital Nairobi. The country national highways agency recently announced progress in the planned construction of the country’s first double-decker highway.
  • Kenya rehabilitates, widens, tolls Northern Corridor
    November 8, 2017
    A massive highway project in Kenya will boost transport for the country as well as its neighbours - Shem Oirere reports. Kenya has commenced the process of rehabilitating, expanding and tolling of 657km of East Africa’s Northern Corridor that is anchored on the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa and which links the gateway with landlocked countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and parts of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).