Skip to main content

Bridge savings in Scotland to fund road improvements

The project to construct the new Forth Crossing close to Scottish capital Edinburgh is looking extremely positive, with cost savings envisaged for the bridge. The Queensferry Crossing scheme now looks to require slightly less funding than had been originally expected when the plans were unveiled in 2011, due in part to tight controls over spending. The bridge costs had been budgeted at close to €2 billion (£1.6 billion) initially but the project now looks likely to cost €1.81 billion (£1.45 billion). The sa
August 27, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Construction of the third Don Crossing in Aberdeen is commencing and completion is planned for late 2015

The project to construct the new Forth Crossing close to Scottish capital Edinburgh is looking extremely positive, with cost savings envisaged for the bridge. The Queensferry Crossing scheme now looks to require slightly less funding than had been originally expected when the plans were unveiled in 2011, due in part to tight controls over spending. The bridge costs had been budgeted at close to €2 billion (£1.6 billion) initially but the project now looks likely to cost €1.81 billion (£1.45 billion). The savings from the bridge project will instead be invested in upgrades to the A9, bringing forward the start of this series of works. In all the A9 upgrade is expected to cost €3.745 billion (£3 billion), with the stretch from Perth to Inverness being upgraded to a dual carriageway along its length by 2025. The first of 12 stretches of the A9 to be upgraded will be the 8km section between Kincraig and Dalraddy, with an expected cost of some €62.4 million (£50 million). The new Forth Crossing is being constructed as the existing Forth Road Bridge is wearing out, due to a massive increase in both traffic volumes and vehicle weights that was not conceived when it was first planned in the 1950s. The upgrade to the A9 is much needed as the route provides an important link for transport and tourism between Scotland’s highly-populated Central Belt and the city of Inverness in the Scottish Highlands.

Meanwhile a new bridge is planned for the Scottish city of Aberdeen, centre of the country’s oil industry. Continued growth in the city from the oil industry is fuelling an increase in vehicle numbers, with congestion a serious problem. As a result, Aberdeen City Council has given a contract to Balfour Beatty to construct the Third Don Crossing at a cost of some €17.6 million (£14.3 million). The two existing crossings to the north of the city centre suffer heavy congestion during peak periods at present and this new bridge is intended to alleviate the problem. Balfour Beatty will build the new 90m span over the River Don, which will feature twin open box steel girders supporting a reinforced concrete deck.

Related Content

  • US$4 billion for road expansion in Vietnam
    May 21, 2024
    US$4 billion investment is planned for road expansion in Vietnam.
  • Skanska Balfour Beatty install first M25 superspan gantry during motorway upgrade
    August 22, 2013
    The first superspan gantry has been installed over the M25 motorway near London, England. The structure near Junction 24 (Potters Bar, Hertfordshire) is part of the €219.92 million (£188 million) Managed Motorway scheme to upgrade the motorway between junctions 23 and 27. Weighing 36 tonnes and measuring 40m across, it is the first of five superspan gantries which will be installed during the project being carried out by Skanska Balfour Beatty, on behalf of the Highways Agency. The gantries will
  • Cowi wins Massey Tunnel design
    July 22, 2022
    Cowi has won a contract as owner's engineer for an eight-lane replacement immersed tunnel under the Fraser River near the Pacific coast city of Vancouver. Cowi said it will draw on its experience designing the original four-lane George Massey Tunnel in 1959 and whose removal the engineering firm will later oversee.
  • The drive for US road funding: will corporate America get a seat?
    September 13, 2017
    Trumponomics aims to use public money for pump-priming an even greater amount of cash from the private sector to improve America’s crumbling roads. But is political will matching corporate America’s enthusiasm for more private investment, asks David Arminas If there were ever a test case for comparing public-private partnerships and design-build contracts, the recently completed Ohio River Bridges Project is it (see previous article).