Skip to main content

Unexpected problems delay Swiss highway project

A highway project looks set to face extended delays in its construction due to the discovery of contaminated land. A two year highway project planned in the canton Valais will now take considerably longer to complete due to the unexpected discovery of mercury contamination on the site. The contamination is historic and appears to be the result of disposal carried out by a local chemicals firm in the 1930s, when there were few controls over what could be dumped. The company had tipped its chemical waste into
November 28, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A highway project looks set to face extended delays in its construction due to the discovery of contaminated land. A two year highway project planned in the canton Valais will now take considerably longer to complete due to the unexpected discovery of mercury contamination on the site. The contamination is historic and appears to be the result of disposal carried out by a local chemicals firm in the 1930s, when there were few controls over what could be dumped. The company had tipped its chemical waste into a canal but the scale of the contamination has yet to be fully assessed. The project requires some 240,000m3 of earthmoving work and at this early stage, it looks as if some 20,000m3 will have to be treated. The chemicals firm is still in business and will pay for the extra decontamination work necessary. However, the issue does highlight the problem of historic contamination dating from when environmental controls were less thorough than at present. With the need to re-use many former industrial sites for infrastructure work in developed nations, this type of problem is likely to resurface on a regular basis.

Related Content

  • Mexico introduces new professional roles to address road safety
    June 24, 2013
    *Ana Maria de la Parra introduces the new external road operation supervisors and fatal accident appraisers who could make a vital contribution to improving the efficiency and safety of highways in middle-income countries like Mexico. Sometimes it is difficult to pin down the perception of a country like Mexico in the popular international mindset. Visitors travelling to Mexico City for the first time are often amazed by its size. They are also frequently taken aback by how unexpectedly advanced it is in te
  • A new study is being carried out for a proposed bridge project for the UK’s Thames River
    April 4, 2012
    Engineering specialist AECOM will carry out a study into the proposed Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK.
  • Developments in hybrid vehicles
    February 27, 2012
    There is an array of future vehicle solutions in development - Mike Woof reports. Ever since Henry Ford's Model T showed that the motor car could provide transport for ordinary people rather than being an exclusive toy of the rich, vehicle numbers have exploded. In every country around the world, vehicle ownership continues to grow.
  • Washed to perfection
    July 16, 2012
    Ever tightening aggregate specifications for road surfacing materials is driving more quarries to wash their materials. Claire Symes looks at the technology and the implications for the industry Stricter aggregates specifications for both asphalt and concrete surfacing materials and the need to make the best use of all extracted material is driving greater use of washing equipment in the quarrying industry. But the latest washing and recycling technology means that this growth does not have to significantly