Skip to main content

Highway tunnel will boost Amsterdam's economy?

An important tunnel project is being put forward for the city of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
March 15, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
An important tunnel project is being put forward for the city of Amsterdam in the Netherlands. This has been given the go ahead by the country’s government and the city’s authorities and will see a section of the A10 highway running through a tunnel. The current section of the A10 that lies close to the Zuidas area will be relocated into the tunnel in a bid to improve environmental issues for residents, by cutting noise and exhaust pollution. The move would also allow further urban and business development in Zuidas and construction of the new tunnel is expected to commence in 2015, taking eight years to complete. The project is expected to cost in the region of €1.4 billion in all, of which €1 billion wold be paid by the Dutch Government, €130 million by Amsterdam’s city authorities and €75 million by the province of North Holland. The Zuidas area is of economic importance to Amsterdam and generates some €2 billion/year so those championing the tunnel project say that it will help boost the country’s economy in the longer term. However, the Dutch central planning bureau CPB is less enthusiastic over the plans for the tunnel. According to the CBP, widening of the A10 highway where it runs close to the Zuidas commercial area would be profitable but construction the tunnel would not be. The CPB says that the tunnel would result in €490 million in additional costs, while extra income from the project would amount to €210 million, equating to a loss of €280 million. According to CPB, the economic forecasts for the benefits of the tunnel are unrealistically high. Who has the more accurate forecast and what will happen with regard to the A10 highway has yet to be revealed. It is not clear whether either the tunnel or the highway widening options will eventually be carried out that stage.

Related Content

  • Better maintenance is on the Horizon for UK’s Warrington Council
    May 15, 2018
    Good, readable analysis of road surfaces to ensure sufficient maintenance funding is an essential part of asset management. The technical side of ensuring a good road surface is integral to maintaining safe, superior highway infrastructure. But securing sufficient government funding for such work – repairs and new-build – based on the current road surface is also essential. To evaluate road conditions and structure for such a business case, one UK local council turned to software provider Yotta.
  • Construction equipment market to grow - CEA report
    February 29, 2012
    The UK’s Construction Equipment Association attracted a large audience for its annual general meeting.
  • Metro Pacific pushes for Cebu-Mactan bridge in the Philippines
    January 19, 2015
    Metro Pacific Investments Corp (MPIC) is in discussions to form a joint venture for construction of a toll bridge connecting the islands of Mactan and Cebu in the Philippines. Cebu is an island province that incorporates 167 surrounding islands and islets, one of them being Mactan, which lies immediately off Cebu Island, across from Cebu City. MPIC’s subsidiary, Metro Pacific Tollways Development Corp (MPTDC), is proposing an 8.3km bridge costing around US$380 million, according to local media reports
  • Dutch tunnel planned to reduce congestion
    February 22, 2012
    A new tunnel is being proposed in the Netherlands between The Hague and Delft.