Skip to main content

Vietnam's additional highways

Plans are now well in hand for two major highway projects in Vietnam.
March 2, 2012 Read time: 1 min
Plans are now well in hand for two major highway projects in Vietnam. The two highways will be located in the southwest of the country. A 225km link running along the country's southern coast is expected to cost US$440 million and work is now starting. This highway will connect Ca Mau city and the Xa Xia border and will run through Kien Giang Province. Meanwhile the 32km stretch of the My Thuan-Can Tho highway will cost some $294 million to build and will be developed under the PPP model. This will be a four lane link with two lanes of traffic in either direction and the project will be carried out by 3561 Cuu Long Corporation for Investment, Development and Project Management of Transport Infrastructure (Cuu Long CIPM).

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New projects planned for Vietnam
    January 27, 2023
    New transport infrastructure projects are planned for Vietnam.
  • Vietnam’s major road works are underway
    January 10, 2023
    Vietnam’s major road works are underway as North-South Expressway stages commence.
  • Vietnam's key coastal highway
    February 7, 2012
    A major new highway project is starting shortly in Vietnam, which will improve the country's links with its neighbours. The US$440 million project is for a 220km highway in the Mekong Delta and will eventually form part of a 1,000km road connecting Vietnam with Cambodia and Thailand.
  • Vietnam’s North-South Expressway project prioritised
    October 20, 2017
    Vietnam’s Ministry of Transport is prioritising the construction of the North-South expressway project. It is seeking the approval of the Vietnamese Government approval to speed up the development of a 713km stretch of the expressway. This particular section of the expressway is phase one of the project and has an estimated construction cost of US$ 5.73 billion. Just over half of the construction cost will be paid for by private investors while Government bonds are expected to pay for the remaining sum. Thi