Skip to main content

FCC heads group that will build Toyo Tunnel in Colombia

Spanish environmental services, infrastructure and water group FCC has secured a €392 deal to design, build, operate and maintain the 10km Toyo Tunnel in Urabá Port, Colombia. The Government of Antioquia awarded the project to the consortium in which Madrid-based FCC has a 40% share and a group of local business people hold 60%. The tunnel is around 80km from Medellin, the capital of Colombia’s mountainous Antioquia province. The US$426 million contract is for 10 years, during which design and constru
November 6, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Spanish environmental services, infrastructure and water group 4914 FCC has secured a €392 deal to design, build, operate and maintain the 10km Toyo Tunnel in Urabá Port, Colombia.

The Government of Antioquia awarded the project to the consortium in which Madrid-based FCC has a 40% share and a group of local business people hold 60%.

The tunnel is around 80km from Medellin, the capital of Colombia’s mountainous Antioquia province. The US$426 million contract is for 10 years, during which design and construction will take around seven and half years and the rest will be for operation and maintenance.

Once complete the Toyo Tunnel will be the longest of its kind in Colombia. It will substantially improve the connection between Medellín and the region of Urabá, includes over 40km of road and over 12km of tunnels. Journey time between Medellin and Urabá will be cut from the six hours to three and a half when using private vehicles.

The project, located between the municipalities of Giraldo and Cañasgordas, consists of building a new 41km two-lane road with a dual carriageway section.

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.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Colombia plans PPP project
    February 5, 2015
    A new highway project is planned for Colombia, which will be designed and constructed under a PPP concession. The Colombian Government awarded the project to Grupo Odinsa. This will be the country’s second PPP highway project and is expected to cost in the region of US$513 million to construct. The complete 325km project includes building a ring road in Villavicencio, as well as works between Villavicencio-Acacias, Villavicencio-Apiay and between Puerto Gaitan-Puente Arimena. Colombia’s National Infrastruct
  • State of the art tunnel a conservation triumph
    May 2, 2012
    The opening of a 1.8km tunnel in southern England is designed to ease traffic bottlenecks in an environmentally sensitive area. Patrick Smith reports
  • State of the art tunnel a conservation triumph
    February 28, 2012
    The opening of a 1.8km tunnel in southern England is designed to ease traffic bottlenecks in an environmentally sensitive area. Patrick Smith reports
  • Causeway and immersed road for LagoonHull
    December 1, 2021
    The agency proposing the UK’s LagoonHull project says it’s development and construction costs could be between €1.2-2.4 billion.