Skip to main content

New crossing planned for Kerch Strait

Plans for a new crossing for the Kerch Strait are now moving forward. The Russian roads company Avtodor is in charge of the project, which calls for the building of both road and rail connections. As series of options are being considered and in all the work is expected to cost in the region of US$8.2-$10.9 billion. There are eight options being investigated at present, with five looking at bridges to carry both road and rail and a further three for combined connections with bridges for the roads and tunnel
June 10, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Plans for a new crossing for the Kerch Strait are now moving forward. The Russian roads company 3974 Avtodor is in charge of the project, which calls for the building of both road and rail connections. As series of options are being considered and in all the work is expected to cost in the region of US$8.2-$10.9 billion. There are eight options being investigated at present, with five looking at bridges to carry both road and rail and a further three for combined connections with bridges for the roads and tunnels for the rail links. The least costly option is for a twin deck bridge carrying road and electric rail links with two lanes of vehicle traffic in either direction on one deck and twin tracks on the other. The most costly option will be for a bridge carrying twin traffic lanes in either direction as well as a tunnel for the twin track rail connection. A feasibility study is being carried out by the Giprotransmost Institute, which will be completed by November 2014. This study will determine the project costs more accurately, allowing Avtodor to decide on which of the eight alternatives will be selected.

This is not the first bridge to be constructed across the Kerch Strait. Russian forces built a rail connection across the Kerch Strait, which was opened in late 1944 and carried troops. However the bridge was destroyed by ice flows in early 1945 and it was not rebuilt. There have been plans to build a bridge across the Kerch Strait since the collapse of this first structure, however these have been hampered by the sometimes difficult relations between the Ukraine and Russia. The problems between the two nations reached a head in 2003 over the disputed territory of Tuzla Island, lying in the Kerch Strait, due in part to the construction of a dam linking Russia to the island.

The project to build road and rail links has since been revived although it is not clear how the most recent spate of troubles between Ukraine and Russia will affect plans for the road and rail link.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Storstrom Bridge to be Denmark’s third longest
    March 8, 2018
    Form and functionality come together in Denmark’s latest Storstrom Bridge design. David Arminas reports. An Italian joint venture recently won the construction contract for what will be one of Denmark’s longest bridges, the replacement 4km-long road and rail Storstrom Bridge. The Danish Road Directorate - Vejdirektoratet - awarded the work to a joint venture of Condotte and Grandi Lavori Fincosit along with bridge design consultant Seteco Ingegneria as a subcontractor. Estimated cost is around €550 milli
  • Approval for Moscow’s ring road reconstruction
    October 15, 2015
    Moscow’s ring road is due for rebuilding – Eugene Gerden writes. The Moscow city authorities have finalised the project of the reconstruction of the Moscow Ring Road. The ring road encircles the City of Moscow and the plan was announced by Marat Khusnullin, deputy mayor of the city. Khusnullin said that, to date, the Moscow city government has completed 90% of the design documentation of the project.
  • Major bridge widening project going to plan
    May 2, 2012
    When built it was determined that a vital US road/rail bridge would always be widened.
  • Major bridge widening project going to plan
    April 11, 2012
    When built it was determined that a vital US road/rail bridge would always be widened. Work on that huge project is going to plan as Patrick Smith reports One of the biggest bridge widening projects in the world is being carried out under an ambitious development programme. At US$1.2 billion, the seven-year scheme to widen the Huey P. Long Bridge in the US state of Louisiana is also the largest of 16 projects planned under the state's TIMED (Transportation Infrastructure Model for Economic Development)