Skip to main content

Cost increases for major Chilean highway project

The cost of Chile’s Vespucio Oriente highway project is increasing, while its completion also looks set to be delayed. A 13% budget increase is now required due to additional costs from a number of factors such as urban landscaping, according to Business News Americas. The Américo Vespucio Oriente (AVO) expressway is being built in Chilean capital Santiago and was originally expected to cost in the region of US$940 million. However Chile’s Public Works Ministry, MOP, has said that the route will now cost so
November 15, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
The cost of Chile’s Vespucio Oriente highway project is increasing, while its completion also looks set to be delayed. A 13% budget increase is now required due to additional costs from a number of factors such as urban landscaping, according to Business News Americas. The Américo Vespucio Oriente (AVO) expressway is being built in Chilean capital Santiago and was originally expected to cost in the region of US$940 million. However Chile’s Public Works Ministry, MOP, has said that the route will now cost some $1.06 billion. The project is for a 40-year concession package that includes building and operating a 9.3km underground expressway through Santiago. The route runs from El Salto Avenue to Príncipe de Gales Avenue, under the existing Américo Vespucio beltway. Because of the route, the project will be both complex and challenging and MOP also said that firms or joint ventures interested in participating in the tender will now have until December 30th 2013 to submit technical bids, compared to the previous deadline of November 22nd 2013. The ministry will then announce the economic proposals for the concession on January 20th 2014.

The new AVO route will be built on two levels, each one carrying a one-way, three-lane expressway. Road capacity will increase to 8,000 vehicles/hour. The project is required as Santiago suffers chronic congestion, particularly at peak periods. The authorities split the long-delayed AVO tender in two, given the complexity of the project, which will run through five municipalities in eastern Santiago. The new AVO route will provide the missing link in the city's beltway and was originally intended to run underground for 13km, joining El Salto with Grecia Avenue. However, this plan attracted strong protests from residents of the La Reina and Peñalolén districts. The 968 Chilean Government opted to split the project and call a tender only for the first 9.3km stretch. However in March 2014 Chile will have a new election and responsibility for the project will then be passed to whichever party wins. Opposition candidate for the presidency, Michelle Bachelet, has previously said she opposed the splitting of the tender and this could further add to the wrangling over the project, as well as adding additional delays.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • St Petersburg city centre to get ‘highway frame’
    August 23, 2012
    Local government leaders in the Russian city of St Petersburg have announced plans for a ‘highway frame’ around the historic city centre. The highway with uninterrupted traffic flow will connect the Primorsky district to Obvodny Canal with an entrance to Western High-Speed Diameter. The project offers to resume bridge construction across the Malaya Neva from Petrogradskaya Storona to Vasilyevsky Island, to reconstruct Obvodny Canal embankments, and to build a highway with a bridge in range of Fayansovaya an
  • Costa Rica highway concession package cancelled
    March 19, 2014
    The Costa Rican Government is paying compensation worth US$28.4 million for the cancellation of a highway concession package. The compensation relates to the San José-San Ramón highway concession and is being paid to the Brazilian construction company OAS, reports Business News Americas. This follows a legal dispute over the project and is some $10 million less than OAS originally claimed in compensation. The 30 year concession package was cancelled last year due to opposition. There were allegations of a c
  • Brisbane’s new airport link is an engineering success
    April 12, 2013
    Financial troubles for Brisbane's new Airport Link overshadow its construction success – Adrian Greeman writes. Political argument and legal dispute is likely to rage for some time yet over the bankruptcy of Australian road operator BrisConnect, which went into receivership this February with A$3 billion in debt. Toll paying users for its new Airport Link have been less than half the predicted numbers since it opened in July last summer. But if its nancial engineering is being questioned, the same is not t
  • Despite earlier contractor issues, road projects in Bosnia are proceeding on track
    May 16, 2012
    Key road construction projects are now moving forward in Bosnia with work on-track for the Sarajevo ringroad as well as the Corridor Vc highway. Construction of a 130km section of the Corridor Vc highway should be complete by 2014 according to Bosnia's Ministry of Transport and Telecoms. Work on the first section of the Sarajevo ringroad should be completed within five months, following the signing of an agreement worth €17 million between the Austrian firm Strabag and the Bosnian company HP Investing. The