Skip to main content

New bridge for Indonesia

The tender process for the new Sei Tayan bridge project in Indonesia is now opening.
February 27, 2012 Read time: 1 min
The tender process for the new Sei Tayan bridge project in Indonesia is now opening. The US$102.6 million project will be financed partly from state funds, although the majority will be sourced from a Chinese loan. Indonesia's Public Work Ministry will finalise the tenders at the end of August 2011 and will then announce the winner of the project.

Related Content

  • Brazil opening tender processes for highways, tunnels and road repairs
    July 4, 2014
    A series of tenders for major highway, tunnel and road repair projects are being opened in Brazil. The country’s national transport infrastructure department, DNIT, has set out plans for a series of tenders, all of which form part of phase 2 of the country's growth acceleration plan, PAC. The first of the key projects opening for tender will be the new Morro dos Cavalos tunnel, which will be constructed in the southern state of Santa Catarina. This 1.36km tunnel will be built in the city of Palhoça and form
  • New Paraguay-Brazil bridge being built
    July 1, 2020
    Construction work is now underway on a new Paraguay-Brazil bridge.
  • New bridge planned for key Indonesia link
    July 22, 2013
    A feasibility study worth US$199 million will be carried out for the planned Sunda Straits Bridge in Indonesia. The bridge itself is expected to cost close to $20 billion to construct. It will be of major economic importance for Indonesia by providing a direct road link between the islands of Sumatra and Java. The link will connect Sumatra directly to Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, and the bridge is expected to be 27km long in all. The Sunda Straits Bridge will actually be a series of links connecting the sm
  • Russia’s trans-continental route
    August 10, 2018
    Russia is spending US$10 billion on building a 2,000km section of road connecting China with the EU – Eugene Gerden reports Russia has now started building a 2,000km section of a new transcontinental route, which will connect China and the EU. According to senior officials from the Russian Ministry of Transport, which is implementing the project, the new road, will be known as the Meridian and will stretch through the Russian territory that borders with Kazakhstan and Belarus. This route forms the Russian