Skip to main content

Indonesia building bridges to remote villages

June 28, 2017 Read time: 1 min

Indonesia is setting out plans for a programme of bridge construction that will help boost access to many of its most remote villages. The country’s mountainous regions suffer from poor access due to limited transport infrastructure at present. The aim of the programme will be to construct up to 60 new bridges to improve accessibility, which will help boost economic development in these remote rural regions. Suspension bridges are likely to be used in many instances due to the suitability of this type of structure for the challenging, mountainous topography.

Related Content

  • Ghana’s new modular steel bridges
    March 5, 2019
    Ghana’s Ministry of Transport is joining forces with Ghana’s Armed Forces to build up to 5,000 small bridges across the country. Modular steel bridges will be erected over small rivers in rural locations, in a bid to improve access to outlying areas that presently suffer from poor transport connections. Repairs will be carried out to 150 steel bridges currently in poor conditions, while modular steel bridge components are being bought from a supplier in the Czech Republic. The US firm Acrow Bridge has alr
  • Bangladesh moves forward with US$735 million highways programme
    August 5, 2021
    A massive highways development programme is being planned in Bangladesh
  • Vietnam launches second phase of Spans of Love bridge programme
    July 14, 2016
    The second phase of Vietnam’s rural bridge building programme will construct around 4,000 bridges, many of them road bridges, and will start next month Nguyen Van Huyen, director of the Directorate for Roads, said many of the bridges will be suspension type and improve communication for around 5,200 communes in 50 provinces. A report by the English-language news agency VietNamNet quoted Nhuyen saying that priority will be given to 63 impoverished districts, many of them home to ethnic minorities.
  • Chinese highway project under construction
    February 9, 2017
    China’s infrastructure expansion programme is in the process of transforming the country. Meanwhile its construction market is the largest in the world, comprising around 25% of the country’s US$11 trillion economy. However, slowing domestic growth in recent years has encouraged the Chinese Government to invest in key infrastructure projects in a bid to improve the country’s transport connections.