Skip to main content

2023 Global Road Achievement Award Winner - Environmental Mitigation: Xingyi Ring Expressway

An important road link in China has won a prestigious 2023 Global Road Achievement Award
By IRF Global March 6, 2024 Read time: 2 mins

The Xingyi Ring Expressway in Guizhou is renowned as the world’s most impressive expressway in karst peak forests. This 62.5km-long expressway wraps around the south of Xingyi City, a notable mountainous tourism city, traversing through distinctive karst peak forest regions. It links several renowned geological sites, including the Maling River Canyon, Wanfenglin (Forest of Ten Thousand Peaks), Xingyi National Geological Park, and Louna Village, home to the traditional Bouyei ethnic minority.

With a deep commitment to environmental and cultural preservation, the expressway incorporated over 20 cutting-edge technologies in its design, construction, and operation, serving as a model for environmental and cultural conservation. The route was meticulously planned with ecological, cultural, geological, and environmental considerations in mind. Utilizing BIM+GIS simulation design and life-cycle analysis, a tunnel route costing an additional US$7.70 million was chosen to prevent disruption to Louna Village and the farmland cultivated by the Bouyei minority for generations. Remarkably, 91.2% of the entire route achieved zero earthwork disposal, conserving 612,000m² of land. Innovative construction techniques like prefabricated bridge structures and high pile caps minimised excavation by 54,000m³. The tunnel designs, featuring flat entrances, reduced vegetation damage by 47,000m² and further excavation by 89,000 m³.

In the construction phase, 310,000m³ of excavated topsoil was repurposed for landscaping; 1.77 million m³ of tunnel debris was recycled for concrete and roadbed material. Additionally, 70 pipelines were installed to transport bridge construction waste, minimizing ecological disruption. Artificial intelligence expedited the tunnel support parameter selection. Post-construction, 61km of access roads were upgraded for local community use.

Operationally, local flora is used for landscaping, supplemented by a drip irrigation system that cuts water usage by 80% annually, addressing the water scarcity for expressway greenery in karst regions. The expressway also features 85 culverts and six runoff collection ponds to safeguard surface water. Energy-efficient measures include distributed smart solar systems in tunnels, service areas, parking lots, and toll stations, generating 15.2 million kWh of clean electricity yearly. Noise pollution is mitigated through 69 sound barrier sections. These initiatives have collectively reduced carbon emissions by 124,300tonnes and brought tangible ecological benefits.

The expressway’s completion has halved traffic congestion in Xingyi, boosted tourism by 65.5%, and significantly contributed to the economic upliftment of around 301,500 locals. By enhancing transit, connecting cities, and promoting tourism and rural development, the expressway stands as a testament to harmonising engineering with the natural and cultural milieu.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Transylvania Motorway: route to prosperity
    July 4, 2012
    Work is progressing apace on the biggest infrastructure project in Europe, the Transylvania Motorway or Autostrada Transilvania (A3) in Romania, with completion scheduled for 2013. The four-lane, 415km motorway, stretching northwest from Brasov in central Romania, at an altitude of nearly 600m, will reach the country's northwestern border with Hungary at Oradea in Câmpia Crisanei at 130m above sea level, and will connect the cities of Brasov, Fagaras, Sighisoara, Târgu Mures, Cluj-Napoca, Zalau and Oradea.
  • Stonehenge Bypass approved in the UK
    November 13, 2020
    The UK Government has approved the construction of the Stonehenge Bypass.
  • Tunnels and bridges, improving Argentina's major road link
    April 24, 2012
    A road improvement plus tunnel and bridge building contract in an area once inhabited by dinosaurs in northern Argentina, is a small but key part of an ambitious project to complete a road that will eventually link the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Latin America - Adriana Potts reports. Remote, rough and spectacular are words that come to mind when describing the mountains of Ischigualasto in Argentina's northern province of San Juan This is the only place in the world where an undisturbed sequence of rock
  • Santiago’s Autopista Central in line for improvements
    June 18, 2015
    Motorway operator Autopista Central de Chile (AC) has applied to the Ministry of Public Works to make improvements worth around US$340 million to the Autopista Central system in the capital Santiago. Improvements are scheduled for the Quilicura area. AC will present an environmental impact and engineering study this summer to the ministry. Much of the work will take place at night time to avoid traffic disruption. Autopista Central consists of two highways, the westernmost of which branches off from t