Skip to main content

VIDEO: Life in the (very) fast lane on Turkey’s Osman Gazi Bridge

Traffic was light for the reigning World SuperSport motorcycle champion Kenan Sofuoglo when he crossed the new Osman Gazi Bridge at 5a.m. last week. Which is just as well, because he topped out at 400kph on his specially prepared Kawasaki Ninja H2R after just 26 seconds, as the video shows. In fact, no other traffic was allowed on the new US$1.3 billion bridge, named after Osman Gazi, the founder and first sultan of the Ottoman Empire. Turkish media outlet TRTWorld reported that the bike had small win
July 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Traffic was light for the reigning World SuperSport motorcycle champion Kenan Sofuoglo when he crossed the new Osman Gazi Bridge at 5a.m. last week. Which is just as well, because he topped out at 400kph on his specially prepared Kawasaki Ninja H2R after just 26 seconds, as the video shows.

In fact, no other traffic was allowed on the new US$1.3 billion bridge, named after Osman Gazi, the founder and first sultan of the Ottoman Empire.

Turkish media outlet TRTWorld reported that the bike had small winglets to aid stability and the rider was wearing a special leather suit for the occasion. There was no time to waste. To lower the risk of a tyre blowout, Sofuoglu reached the speed in less than 30 seconds,

The Osman Gazi Bridge is shy of 2.7km in length by only few meters. By contrast, Sofuoglo was anything but shy, pushing his bike to around 100kph faster than he normally does during races.

The suspension bridge crosses the Gulf of Izmit in the Sea of Marmara - around 50km east of Istanbul – and is said to be the fourth-longest suspension bridge in the world and the second longest in Europe. Construction of the quake-resistant bridge began in 2010 and it was inaugurated by president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and prime minister Binali Yildirim on June 30, according to TRTWorld.

The bridge is part of a new 421km six-lane Istanbul-Izmir Highway Project, which is costing around US$6.3 billion. When it is completed, it will cut the journey time between Izmir on the southern Aegean coast and Istanbul to the north from 10 hours to around four hours. The highway project is being built through a public-private partnership and is the first road project in the country to be procured under the Build-Operate-Transfer model.

Construction and operation of the bridge was awarded to a joint venture formed by five Turkish companies - 3338 Nurol, Özaltın, 3340 Makyol, 4149 Yüksel and Gocay – and Italian construction company 1324 Astaldi place in April 2009. The consortium assigned bridge construction to company IHI Corporation from Japan.

The highway is expected to be complete in 2018.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Latin America invests in infrastructure growth
    February 15, 2012
    Travelling in one of the world's most diverse regions is not always easy, but spectacular engineering feats will make life easier as Patrick Smith reports. Five years ago a report from the World Bank noted that infrastructure in most of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) had improved over the previous ten years.
  • Key Polish projects are underway or compelte
    December 4, 2014
    The Polish town of Marki is to benefit from a new 15km ring road, which will be constructed by a consortium comprising the contractors Astaldi and Salini. The project has a total value of some €167.4 million. The first section will measure 8.1km and run from Kobylka and Marki junctions. Salini plans to complete this stretch in 32 months. Meanwhile, the second section will run between Radzymin Pld and Kobylka junctions and will be completed in 36 months. Meanwhile work on the final section of the S8 road has
  • Finland ploughs ahead with a planned Hailuoto causeway
    May 8, 2018
    Finland’s planned 8km Hailuoto Causeway is likely to cost around €74 million, according to the North Ostrobothnia Centre for Economic Development, Transport and the Environment.
  • New EU-Russian highway connection
    February 18, 2013
    Among the forests and lakes of Finland, one of Europe's newest motorway links is being built as a Green highway linking Europe to Russia - Adrian Greeman reports The road eastwards from Finland's capital Helsinki, along the north coast of the Gulf of Finland, has not carried heavy traffic volumes, at least until recent times. Highway seven as it is designated locally, or E18 in European nomenclature, is partly motorway but in some sections still dual carriageway or even just a single lane each way, finishin