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

  • Algerian road project faces potential delay
    January 28, 2022
    An important Algerian road project faces a potential delay.
  • Reunion road project; agreement reached
    August 13, 2020
    An agreement has been reached for the massive Reunion coastal road project.
  • Chinese extraction site using XCMG machines
    May 22, 2019
    An extraction operation in China is benefiting from the use of construction machines supplied by XCMG. The site, in Xinjiang, has been using XCMG XE470D and XE700D excavators since 2016. The machines have now clocked in excess of 10,000 operating hours, with operators working in shifts allowing the excavators to operate 20 hours/day. The site is located at the northern edge of the Tianshan Mountains and the south-eastern edge of the Junggar Basin. It is affected by the Indosinian and Yanshan movements, w
  • Benningoven builds special plant for Norwegian firm
    August 18, 2015
    Benninghoven has built an asphalt plant specially to order for a customer in Norway. Contractor Veidekke had a tight timeframe in which the plant could be erected at the firm’s chosen site in Sörli, as well as specific requirements as to its configuration. Benninghoven was able to construct the special TBA 4000 UC asphalt mixing plant to the firm’s request. A notable feature of the plant is that its large capacity materials towers stand 33m high. The order was received in January 2014, with the plant the