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

  • Resilient roads: sector cooperation is the key
    March 11, 2021
    Now is the time for national road agencies and the private sector to cooperate on building more climate resilient roads, urges Dr Erik Denneman*.
  • Roadtec machines deliver Alaska runway rebuild
    January 26, 2017
    A challenging airport runway project in Alaska has been carried out with the help of Roadtec construction equipment equipped with Topcon machine control systems. Anchorage-based Knik Construction carried out the work at the airport in Yakutat, located in the southeast corner of Alaska. Bounded by the Gulf of Alaska to the South, mountains to the North, and coastal glaciers to the East and West, Yakutat is remote even for Alaska. There are no roads leading in or out and all commerce and access is by air o
  • Caterpillar Paving offers a guide to efficient night time paving practices
    October 3, 2014
    Efficient night-time paving operations can reduce construction costs and cut traffic delays - *Todd Mansell writes As roads become more congested, the user cost of daytime lane closures to accommodate road construction and paving has increased dramatically. One solution to lower user costs associated with traffic delays is to carry out more paving at night during off-peak times. However night-time paving brings new challenges to producing quality work in safely.
  • Tasmania to get used tyre crumbing plant
    March 14, 2022
    The project is part of the Australian state’s move towards more crumb rubber for road asphalt.