Skip to main content

Croatia-Bosnia connection

The Svilaj Bridge connecting Croatia and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina is nearly 40% complete, according to the contractors and the Croatian Motorways Directorate. Locally, the Svilaj Bridge – financially a 50-50 project between the two countries - is part of a motorway running from Beli Manastir to Osijek and on tyo Svilaj. But the route is also part of the motorway Budapest-Osijek-Sarajevo-Plocˇ which is the Pan European Corridor Vc (Corridor 5, branch c) connecting Budapest with the Adriatic.
October 2, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Svilaj Bridge: part of Pan European Corridor Vc, Budapest to the Adriatic Sea
The Svilaj Bridge connecting Croatia and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina is nearly 40% complete, according to the contractors and the Croatian Motorways Directorate.


Locally, the Svilaj Bridge – financially a 50-50 project between the two countries - is part of a motorway running from Beli Manastir to Osijek and on tyo Svilaj. But the route is also part of the motorway Budapest-Osijek-Sarajevo-Plocˇ which is the Pan European Corridor Vc (Corridor 5, branch c) connecting Budapest with the Adriatic. Traffic in this corridor - one of the most important branches of the pan-European TEN-T Network - is currently operating on the European route E73.

The Svilaj Bridge superstructure is a continuous beam over seven spans with a double composite cross section made of a steel box, a concrete deck and a bottom concrete slab. The steel box has variable height of 3,300-5,500mm.

The entire structure is a single expansion unit with expansion joints on only the abutments. The piers of the superstructure consist of one massive pier supporting two pot bearings. These bearings are all longitudinally sliding, except for the ones on pier S3.

Each of the two span sections has three 3.5m-wide traffic lanes with no emergency lane but a 0.5m-wide shoulder on both sides. There is also on both span sections a concrete monolith 0.75m-wide sidewalk.

The pier foundation method consists of placing a rectangular head beam on 24 to 36 reinforced concrete piles, depending on the pier location. The 180m-long reinforced concrete piles are 150cm in diameter.

Who’s who

Client: Hrvatske Autoceste, in Croatia, and the Ministry of Communications and Transport of Bosnia and Herzegovina, in Sarajevo
Designer: PZ, Zagreb
Engineer: Centar za organizaciju građenja, in Zagreb
Contractor: Joint Venture: Hering, based in Široki Brijeg, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Viadukt, based in Zagreb

Excavation workers at all pier locations were operating inside a protective steel box that allowed the pumping out of water seepage. Stability of lateral sides of the steel box is ensured with steel bracing at the top and around 2m above the river bed.

Steel superstructure is dropped in place using land-based cranes and the deck slab is concreted in situ using mobile scaffoldding.

Bridge construction started in September 2016. The works on construction of piers S1, S2, S5 and S6 have been completed and so has the assembling of the steel structure in three out of seven bridge spans.

Reinforced concrete piles are now being constructed on piers S3 and S4, that are placed in the River Sava. Completion of the €22.3 million project is expected by next summer.

Key facts

The 660m Svilaj Bridge, costing €22.3 million, over the Sava River connects Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The composite steel structure and a concrete slab structure is 130m wide and consists of 6 piers. The design is of two parallel structures, one for each motorway carriage and three lanes. Design speed of the bridge is 80kph.

Related Content

  • Bridge deck launched for the New Wear Crossing, Sunderland (Video)
    March 30, 2017

    The 300m bridge deck of Sunderland’s New Wear Crossing has been successfully launched across the river.

    The 4,750tonne concrete and steel deck was resting on the south side of the River Wear from where it was inched across to touch the north side in a 20-hour operation. It had to slide through the twin arched towers of the bridge’s double pylon on its way to its final position to connect the city regions of Pallion to the south and Castletown to the north.

  • Tunnels eliminate bottlenecks
    February 10, 2012
    Some of the bottlenecks on the multi-lane Mittlere Ring, Munich, Germany, one of the main arterial roads circling the city centre have been eliminated by the addition of new tunnels. The Luise-Kiesselbach Square, the last section of this road improvement effort, is an important traffic hub south-west of the city where motorways A96 from Lindau and A5 from Garmisch meet, causing long delays in daily rush-hour traffic, writes Patrick Smith.
  • Itinera wins Sweden’s Skurusunds Bridge near Stockholm
    January 21, 2019
    Italian contractor Itinera will build the new 99m-long and 31m-wide Skurusunds Bridge near Stockholm in Sweden. Trafikverket, the Swedish transport administration, awarded the €75 million contract to Itinera, part of Gruppo Gavio. The new bridge will be parallel to the existing bridge which will remain. It handles around 52,000 vehicles daily, many of them commuting to and from Stockholm. Work will include improvements to traffic junctions at Skuru and Björknäs. The four-lane steel bridge will have
  • Managing urban motorway complexity in Sydney
    October 4, 2012
    Sydney’s Hills M2 motorway is being widened while still carrying traffic and meeting tough environmental criteria More than 100,000 vehicles and over 27,000 bus commuters use the Hills M2 motorway on a typical workday, making it one of Sydney’s busiest motorway corridors. Owned and managed by Hills Motorway Ltd (HML) and a key part of the city’s orbital motorway network, the road stretches over 21km, providing a seamless link between the Lane Cove Tunnel and Westlink M7. The Hills M2 Upgrade is one of many