Skip to main content

Bolivia highway complete – built by IBT

Miami-based firm IBT has completed its construction work on a highway link in Bolivia’s Chaco Region. The project cost US$84 million to carry out and is of importance to Bolivia, as it will improve transport connections and improve trade and tourism in the area. The improved route will also make a major boost to safety as the original road had the reputation of being one of the 10 most dangerous mountain roads anywhere in the world. The 61km highway project included moving 5.4 million m3 of earth before the
June 1, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Bolivia’s president, Evo Morales, opened the new 61km road link in the country’s Chaco Region, which was built by IBT

Miami-based firm IBT has completed its construction work on a highway link in Bolivia’s Chaco Region. The project cost US$84 million to carry out and is of importance to Bolivia, as it will improve transport connections and improve trade and tourism in the area. The improved route will also make a major boost to safety as the original road had the reputation of being one of the 10 most dangerous mountain roads anywhere in the world.

The 61km highway project included moving 5.4 million m3 of earth before the asphalt could be laid. "It was a massive earth-moving effort with a tremendous outcome. As a result, drivers are able to drive faster and safer, reducing their travel time by more than two hours,” said Daniel Toledano, managing director and chief operating officer of IBT.

Built by IBT’s parent company Eurofinsa, the Entre Ríos-Palos Blancos Highway crisscrosses six rivers, large ravines, and six mountainous areas with water falls more than 100m high, making it the most relevant and complex project connecting the city of Tarija with O'Connor Province and Gran Chaco province. The project required the construction of three new bridges, more than 200 transverse drainages and other hydraulic infrastructures that help to ensure the road is passable during the rainy season.

The city and provinces are in the department of Tarija in southeastern Bolivia, which borders Argentina to the south and Paraguay to the east. According to the 2012 census, the Tarija department has a population of 482,196 inhabitants.

Bolivian president Evo Morales and local authorities inaugurated the two-lane highway with a celebratory party that included a caravan, traditional dances and rituals characteristic of the region.

Another important milestone was the rescue and conservation of pre-Hispanic urns and ceramics found at the Tacuarandí site, located in the community of the same name, which were delivered in August 2017 to the Isidora Ortiz Cultural Center and Municipal Museum in the municipality of Entre Ríos.

Related Content

  • Tender for US$250-$280 million Paraguay road
    March 13, 2024
    US$250-$280m Uruguay bi-oceanic road connection tender set to open in Paraguay
  • Challenging viaduct construction
    March 2, 2012
    TRAFFIC VOLUMES on Gran Canaria, the third largest of the Canary Islands, have been swelling rapidly in recent years, not least because of the boom in tourism. Among the routes most affected is the 32km long northern motorway GC-2 between Las Palmas and Agaëte, which has reached the limits of its capacity.
  • Dynavis achieves high productivity in the Sub Continent
    April 10, 2018
    Dynavis, the hydraulic fluid technology business of Evonik, is highlighting an Indian quarry case study that recorded 12% more material moved per litre of fuel. In the quarry, owned by a major Indian energy company near the city of Ranchi, hydraulic mining excavators are extracting coal and removing slate for roofing tiles. The excavator weighed 111 tonnes and has an engine output of 567kW. Around 1,100 litres of hydraulic fluid circulated in its hydraulic system and the unit was operated 24 hours a day.
  • EBRD cash for tourist roads in Albania
    June 16, 2023
    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development said part of the goal is to allow tourism to continue beyond the traditional summer months.