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

  • Netherlands: Hochtief, Fluor and Heijmans win Zuidasdok contract
    January 26, 2017
    Germany's Hochtief and US-based Fluor have been awarded a preliminary construction contract for the Zuidasdok regeneration project in Amsterdam. Hochtief and Fluor will each secure 42.5% of the €990 million contract while Dutch contractor Heijmans will secure 15%. Zuidasdok - a joint project by the city of Amsterdam, ProRail and Rijkswaterstaat – will redevelopment the area around Amsterdam Zuid train and metro station, including major changes to the A10 motorway. ProRail is a government organisati
  • Norway road tenders being planned
    June 2, 2020
    Norwegian road tenders are being planned.
  • India rushing to improve its highway system
    February 9, 2012
    Despite the world economic slowdown, India still seems in a rush to improve its highway system as Patrick Smith reports. Later this year India will be seen by hundreds of millions worldwide when the country's capital New Delhi hosts its biggest event ever.
  • ANI transfers operation of Guillermo Gaviria Correa to Mar 1 Devimar
    July 6, 2016
    The Colombian department of Antioquia has transferred operation of the Guillermo Gaviria Correa road connection to the National Infrastructure Agency (ANI). ANI will, in turn, cede the concession to the Mar 1 Devimar consortium. The road, named after the assassinated governor of Antioquia, runs between the municipalities of Medellin and San Jerónimo and connects Medellin to the Uraba Gulf, part of the Caribbean Sea. Gaviria, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, was kidnapped by guerrillas and held captive for