Skip to main content

Tender call for US$940mn phase I of Chile’s Américo Vespucio Oriente highway

A tender call for the first, US$940 million stretch of the Américo Vespucio Oriente underground expressway (AVO) in Chile’s capital Santiago Chile's has been issued by the public works ministry (MOP). The prized 40-year concession entails building and operating a 9.3km underground expressway running from El Salto avenue to Príncipe de Gales avenue. The tunnel will stretch over two different levels, each one hosting a one-way, three-lane expressway. Road capacity along the route will increase to 8,000 vehicl
August 1, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
A tender call for the first, US$940 million stretch of the Américo Vespucio Oriente underground expressway (AVO) in Chile’s capital Santiago Chile's has been issued by the public works ministry (MOP).

The prized 40-year concession entails building and operating a 9.3km underground expressway running from El Salto avenue to Príncipe de Gales avenue. The tunnel will stretch over two different levels, each one hosting a one-way, three-lane expressway.

Road capacity along the route will increase to 8,000 vehicles per hour from a current 3,000 vehicles per hour, in a push to mitigate the city increasing traffic jams.

The AVO project was originally conceived of to be the missing link in a beltway that runs around Santiago. As such, it was originally earmarked to span underground north to south for 13km, joining El Salto with the Rotonda Grecia.

However, opposition from inhabitants of the La Reina and Peñalolén districts to the last 4km-stretch of the tunnel pushed the government, which is leaving office in March 2014, to split the project and call a tender only for the first 9.3km stretch.

The responsibility for the AVO's final stretch will pass on to the new elected president. The current government led by Sebastian Piñera will leave office four months after the presidential election takes place in November 2013.

Parties interested in bidding for the first stretch have until November 22 to submit their offers.

Related Content

  • Algeria is investing in more highway infrastructure
    August 21, 2013
    Algeria’s Public Works Ministry has announced it plans to build new expressway connections to the country’s East-West highway. These expressways will link the Algeria’s ports to the East-West highway, with the aim of reducing congestion and improving traffic flow. A US$373 million expressway measuring 30km long will link the port of Skikda with the East-West highway, with construction work due to start in September 2013. Larger still, a 111km highway will be built linking Djendjen port to Algeria’s East-Wes
  • Sobratema predicts $6 billion-a-year spend on construction equipment
    April 18, 2013
    More than US$ 800 billion of major infrastructure investment projects will drive increasingly high levels of demand for the global construction equipment supply sector in Brazil over the next five years, according to a new report from Sobratema, the Brazilian association of technology for construction and mining. The entire chain of supplies and services will benefit from a massive Brazilian road-building and social housing construction boom as the country gears up to host the 2014 soccer world cup and the
  • Sobratema predicts $6 billion-a-year spend on construction equipment
    January 6, 2017
    More than US$ 800 billion of major infrastructure investment projects will drive increasingly high levels of demand for the global construction equipment supply sector in Brazil over the next five years, according to a new report from Sobratema, the Brazilian association of technology for construction and mining. The entire chain of supplies and services will benefit from a massive Brazilian road-building and social housing construction boom as the country gears up to host the 2014 soccer world cup and the
  • Sobratema predicts $6 billion-a-year spend on construction equipment
    April 18, 2013
    More than US$ 800 billion of major infrastructure investment projects will drive increasingly high levels of demand for the global construction equipment supply sector in Brazil over the next five years, according to a new report from Sobratema, the Brazilian association of technology for construction and mining. The entire chain of supplies and services will benefit from a massive Brazilian road-building and social housing construction boom as the country gears up to host the 2014 soccer world cup and the