Skip to main content

Further delays possible for Colombia tunnel

Further delays to completion look a possibility for Colombia’s La Linea Tunnel project. A strike by truck drivers meant that supplies of construction materials were halted, adding to previous delays. The country’s National Road Institute (Invias) has stated that work on the tunnel does not look likely to be finished until the first quarter of 2017. The project will only be completed before that date if faster progress can be achieved with the electro-mechanical works currently in hand. Invias has previously
July 21, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Further delays to completion look a possibility for Colombia’s La Linea Tunnel project. A strike by truck drivers meant that supplies of construction materials were halted, adding to previous delays. The country’s National Road Institute (2812 Invias) has stated that work on the tunnel does not look likely to be finished until the first quarter of 2017. The project will only be completed before that date if faster progress can be achieved with the electro-mechanical works currently in hand. Invias has previously stated that the tunnel will open to traffic in early 2017 once the necessary commissioning and inspection tasks have been completed. Construction work on the 8.65km tunnel commenced in 2008 and the tunnel was originally planned to be open in 2016.

The project has faced numerous delays and for numerous reasons since it was first planned. Previous delays have arisen due to the discovery of geological conditions more challenging than first expected and also to a lack of suitable insurance cover for some firms involved in the work. The project has also suffered funding issues while the altitude of the portals, at 2,420m and 2,505m, has also presented challenges. Once complete, it will be the longest road tunnel in Latin America and it will make a major reduction in journey times as well as boosting transport safety compared with the existing mountain pass.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • SBM concrete plants for Fehmarnbelt tunnel
    June 17, 2021
    The 18km Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link in the Baltic Sea will create an uninterrupted traffic link between the Danish island of Lolland and the German Island of Fehmarn.
  • Chile-Argentina tunnel project to take nine years
    May 3, 2017
    Construction work for the Agua Negra tunnel connecting Argentina with Chile is expected to take nine years to complete. The actual construction work will commence in 2019, although considerable activity will be required beforehand. Building the tunnel is expected to cost in the orders of US$1.5 billion. Much of the financing for the project is being provided by the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB). So far the IADB has given $20 million to Argentina and a further $20 million to Chile to pay for the nec
  • Building Egypt's world class Desert Highway
    February 9, 2012
    A huge highway upgrade project will transform the Cairo-Alexandria road link into a world-class connection as Mike Woof reports
  • Building Egypt's world class Desert Highway
    May 3, 2012
    A huge highway upgrade project will transform the Cairo-Alexandria road link into a world-class connection as Mike Woof reports. The work to upgrade the Desert Highway connecting Egypt's sprawling capital Cairo with its major port Alexandria, is one of the country's largest infrastructure projects for many years. This 220km highway link is being widened and improved to cope with the hugely increased traffic volumes resulting partly from Egypt's fast growing vehicle population. The Egyptian economy is strong