Skip to main content

Colombia: Toyo Tunnel award to be made in September

The contract award for Columbia’s 9.75km Toyo Tunnel project will be made on September 28, according to Columbian media. The tunnel, costing almost US$760, will be part of a new 39km road between Santa Fe de Antioquia and Canasgordas. World Highways reported in January that the central government will contribute $216 million towards the project, the regional government of Antioquia department will contribute $337 million and the Medellin city government will pitch in with $212 million. Columbia’s N
July 15, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The contract award for Columbia’s 9.75km Toyo Tunnel project will be made on September 28, according to Columbian media.

The tunnel, costing almost US$760, will be part of a new 39km road between Santa Fe de Antioquia and Canasgordas.

3260 World Highways reported in January that the central government will contribute $216 million towards the project, the regional government of Antioquia department will contribute $337 million and the Medellin city government will pitch in with $212 million.

Columbia’s National Infrastructure Agency (ANI) will help finance construction of the tunnel in Antioquia, one of the country’s 32 departments.

Antioquia is in the northwest of the Columbia and has a narrow section that borders the Caribbean Sea, but most of department is mountainous. Antioquia's capital city Medellín has a population of around 2.5 million and is the second largest city in the country after Bogata with a population 7 million.

Projects such as the Toyo Tunnel are part of the government’s Fourth Generation (4G) of the Road Concessions Programme.

4G involves 40 projects that will see around 8,000km of new roads with an investment of $25 billion over seven years. Luis Fernando Andrade Moreno, president of ANI, has said contracts will be let under a Public Private Partnership (PPP) approach.

Earlier this month, ANI awarded the SAC 4G consortium a US$898 million contract to design, build, finance and operate another project in Antioquia, the 176 km Autopista al Mar 1 motorway over 25 years.

The consortium comprises Austrian construction group 945 Strabag (37.5%), Spain’s Sacyr (37.5%) and Concay of Colombia (25%).

The road will link Medellín with the cities of San Jerónimo and Santa Fe de Antioquia before continuing to Bolombolo. It includes involves the completion of 75km of new motorway, the modernisation of a 65km section and the construction of numerous bridges and tunnels.

Construction is expected to begin in the fourth quarter of 2016 and completion is scheduled within five years. In addition to partial revenues in the form of hard toll collections, the consortium will receive annual payments from ANI for its services.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • VIDEO: Nexus picks up Toowoomba bypass project in Queensland, Australia
    August 21, 2015
    Nexus Infrastructure group has signed a contract with the Australian government to deliver the Toowoomba Second Range Crossing project in Queensland state, costing nearly US$1.2 billion.

    Nexus will design construct, finance, operate and maintain the 41km route that will bypass the city of Toowoomba, east to west.

    Toowomba and district, with a population of around 158,000, is inland 125km west of Queensland's capital city Brisbane, on Australia’s northeast coast.
  • Uruguay’s transport investment is seeing major gains
    August 1, 2017
    Uruguay’s road development programme will help deliver economic growth for the future - Gordon Feller reports. Uruguay is embarking on a new nationwide programme to rehabilitate 890km of roads, and the government intends to improve an additional 260km of dangerous highways and roads. This three-year programme aims to reduce traffic accidents, in part thanks to a US$70 million loan recently authorised by the World Bank’s board of directors. The new operation uses a special financing instrument known as “Prog
  • Tough time for tolls
    July 3, 2012
    Spain’s tough economic conditions have resulted in difficult times for the country’s private toll highway operators. A fall in revenue has combined with a tough financial situation to make it difficult to pay off debts. Spain’s Ministry of Public Works is offering potential help with a new viability plan for tolled highways. This would involve merging weak, loss-making highways with long concession contracts, with highways that are profitable. Several options meet this criteria but the sector considers the
  • Turkey to tender for Izmir-Candarli beltway contract
    November 15, 2016
    Turkish highway authorities will tender construction of the remaining part the Izmir-Menemen-Aliaga-Candarli motorway on 15 February. The contract will be build-operate-transfer for the 76km section between the towns of Aliaga and Candarli. Constructions is expected to take three years. The 16km section between Izmir and Menemen is already finished, according to Turkish media. Up to 60,000 vehicles a day are projected to use the highway from Izmir to Candarli. It is officially called the Otoyol 30