Skip to main content

THG Verk starts Ölfusá Bridge work

THG Verk - in Icelandic, ÞG Verk – is the main contractor for the 330m-long cable-stayed bridge that will cross the Ölfusá River, Iceland’s biggest.
By David Arminas December 9, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
An illustration of the new Ölfusá Bridge (image courtesy Vegagerðin/Road and Coastal Administration)

A recent sod-turning ceremony by Iceland’s minister for infrastructure, Sigurdur Ingi Johannsson, signalled the start of work for a replacement bridge over the Olfusar river.

The main contractor for the 330m-long bridge is THG Verk - in Icelandic, ÞG Verk. The cable-stayed structure across the country’s largest river will have a 60m tower and a 19m-wide deck plus a walking and cycling path, according to Vegagerðin, the national Road and Coastal Administration agency.

The bridge will reroute the ring road outside the town of Selfoss and is expected to open in the fall of 2028. The US$102.8 million project, which includes road connections, will be paid for out of tolling revenue. Vegagerðin is the legal owner of Iceland’s roads and has the authority to execute construction of infrastructures on demand from the government.

The new Olfusarbru – a replacement for an 80-year-old suspension bridge – has been designed for better seismic resistance as well as flooding by the Olfusar river.

An original cable Ölfusárbrú was first built in 1891 and became the largest bridge in Iceland at the time. But in 1944 the eastern bearing cables broke due to the weight of two trucks. The existing 84m-long suspension bridge was built in 1945 and is in the town of Selfoss. It handle around 14,500 vehicles daily, according to Icelandic media reports.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Germany’s Salierbrücke bridge reopens
    December 1, 2021
    Extensive upgrading of the Salier Bridge was commissioned by Karlsruhe city council in 2019.
  • Shortlist set for Norway’s Sotra PPP project
    May 21, 2020
    Sotra Link, Itias and Vis Sotra are vying for the $1.15 billion deal.
  • New bridge is spanning China’s Yangtze River
    June 28, 2013
    There is massive development in design and construction of bridges in China and the Yingwuzhou Bridge over the Yangtze River is one key project – Mike Woof reports, with assistance from Route One’s Chinese publishing partner *CMTM Called the Mother River, the Yangtze is a focal point for China politically, economically and culturally. The river has been at the heart of China’s development for millennia, its history stretching back as far as the dawn of human civilisation. The name Yangtze, or Yangzi, is its
  • Norway drops tender plans for second Sotra fixed link
    February 18, 2019
    Statens Vegvesen, the Norwegian Road Administration, has cancelled tender plans for a new Sotra fixed link project that were scheduled for the spring. Jon Georg Dale, minister of transport, recently told the Norwegian Parliament that the geology near Lake Storavatnet along the route of the project, of which the second bridge would be a part, has caused concern among planners. Also, reconstruction of a high-voltage power cable has come under questions. Helge Eidsnes, a regional manager of Statens Vegve