Skip to main content

Road construction in Ghana

A new generation asphalt plant has proved its worth for the construction of an important road link in Ghana.
August 23, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
A mobile plant from Lintec & Linnhoff has provided asphalt for the Tema Roundabout upgrade in Ghana

The Linnhoff TSD1500 MobileMix asphalt plant was used for the project at the busy Tema Motorway Roundabout in southern Ghana. The roundabout had to be improved as it was suffering from heavy congestion at peak periods, with traffic queues often extending up to 1km.

The ‘Project for the Improvement of Ghanaian International Corridors’ was implemented – one of the priority projects proposed in the ‘West Africa Growth Ring Corridor Master Plan’. A US$57million grant from the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) was provided to help with the work.  The Motorway Interchange at Tema, Ghana’s largest port city, is the crossroads of two of the country’s busiest international corridors: National Highway 1 (N1), which runs along the Ghanaian coastline virtually all the way between its borders with Ivory Coast and Togo, and, in the far east, National Highway 2 (N2), its main north-south highway which runs to the border with Burkina Faso.

In February 2018, work on the Tema Motorway Interchange began, transforming the roundabout into an interchange with an underpass, the construction of a 2.1km three-lane dual carriageway with 730m underpass on the N1 and improvement of 1.9km of two-lane dual carriageway on the N2. It also included the paving of five service roads and eight ramps for right-turning traffic, a 190m-long box-culvert underpass, four pedestrian bridges, traffic signals and street lighting.

The Linnhoff TSD1500 MobileMix Asphalt Plant produced around 52,000tonnes of hot mix asphalt for the construction of a total of 150,000m2 of asphalt, for use in the base, binder and wearing courses.

The roundabout upgrade is improving the capacity, safety, and efficiency of transport and freight, leading to vastly improved logistics to and from Tema Port, boosting trade.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Astaldi begins drilling tunnels on Poland’s S7 dual carriageway
    March 14, 2017
    Italian contractor Astaldi has begun drilling two parallel tunnels as part of its S7 dual carriageway project in Poland. Each tunnel, between Naprawa and Skomielna Biala and under the Lubon Maly massif, will each be just over 2km long. Astaldi, based in Rome, won the three-year S7 dual carriageway project worth around €225 million in 2016 Work includes 38 bridges and viaducts and three motorway services. There will also be 25km of access roads and two junctions. The north-south S7, when complete
  • Egypt’s road programme is now restarting
    February 20, 2014
    Egypt is developing its road network – local reporting and images by Egypt correspondent Mohammed Elsayed Tantawy. Egypt is now gearing up its road construction activity, with a view to reducing congestion and improving traffic flow. The country’s main highway connecting capital Cairo with the port city of Alexandria has already seen a major widening programme, but other important routes are also now being upgraded and improved. The road development programme started in earnest some years ago but was delaye
  • US$1.25 billion underpass for Oran, Algeria
    June 21, 2024
    A US$1.25 billion underpass is being built Algeria’s port of Oran.
  • Cold road reclamation in South Africa
    July 18, 2012
    Raubex Construction’s new Cat RM500 rotary mixer is proving its worth on a road reclamation work on a South African highway Part of an extensive motorway network some 185km long, South Africa’s ongoing Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project (GIFP) is creating a modern, world-class toll route system. The new road will provide major impetus to socio-economic growth in the country’s most populous and commercially active region. Being built in stages by the South African National Roads Authority (SANRAL), these r