Skip to main content

Norway drops tender plans for second Sotra fixed link

Statens Vegvesen, the Norwegian Road Administration, has cancelled tender plans for a new Sotra fixed link project that were scheduled for the spring. Jon Georg Dale, minister of transport, recently told the Norwegian Parliament that the geology near Lake Storavatnet along the route of the project, of which the second bridge would be a part, has caused concern among planners. Also, reconstruction of a high-voltage power cable has come under questions. Helge Eidsnes, a regional manager of Statens Vegve
February 18, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
Artist impression of a proposed four-lane Sotra Bridge, a suspension crossing beside the existing two-lane bridge that opened in 1971 (photo courtesy Statens Vegvesen)
1208 Statens Vegvesen, the Norwegian Road Administration, has cancelled tender plans for a new Sotra fixed link project that were scheduled for the spring.


Jon Georg Dale, minister of transport, recently told the Norwegian Parliament that the geology near Lake Storavatnet along the route of the project, of which the second bridge would be a part, has caused concern among planners. Also, reconstruction of a high-voltage power cable has come under questions.

Helge Eidsnes, a regional manager of Statens Vegvesen, said a new project plan will be presented in the summer. The project is intended to be a public-private partnership.

Last May, Parliament approved the €1.03 billion project - priority in the National Transport Plan for 2018–2023 - that included the nearly 1km Sotra Bridge. The signing of the contract was to have been in early 2020, according to the process laid out by Statens Vegvesen.

The proposed four-lane Sotra suspension bridge is 29.5m wide and has a 592m main span with the two towers rising 144m above sea level. A separate pedestrian path and separate cycle lane, both 5m wide, were part of the design.

The project overall has 19 other smaller bridges, 11 overpasses/underpasses and 21 tunnel portals. Around 11 tunnels through the mountains were envisaged, from 1-2km longs. Around 24km of access roads are scheduled with nearly 14km of bicycle and pedestrian paths, around 3m wide.

The new bridge is to be built parallel to the existing two-lane 1.2km concrete suspension Sotra Bridge that opened in 1971. It carries around 22,700 daily, estimated to rise to 26,000 by 2024. It crosses Knarreviksundet (Knarrevik Sound) that separates the island of Litlesotra, part of the Sotra archipelago, from the mainland and the city Bergen.

A new bridge is needed because, according to Statens Vegvesen, over the past 15 years there has been a strong increase in traffic between Sotra and Bergen. But old bridge is vulnerable to high winds and is closed when wind speed exceeds 30m/sec.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • British Columbia decides on Massey Tunnel
    August 20, 2021
    Canada’s Pacific coast province of British Columbia has announced the George Massey Tunnel replacement will be another tunnel and not a bridge as decided earlier.
  • Skanska wins E18 section near Oslo
    June 19, 2023
    Construction of 660m of the Høvik Tunnel is included in the contract, as well as a cycle path.
  • Turkish highways and bridge project financing secured
    June 7, 2018
    The financing package that will pay for Turkey’s €2.43 billion Malkara to Çanakkale highway and 1915 Çanakkale Bridge has now been secured. This follows on from Mott MacDonald completing its technical due diligence of the project documentation. The project will be handled under the PPP model. The centrepiece of the project is the €1.68 billion Çanakkale 1915 bridge. This will be over 4.6km long, with a 2,023m main span that will be the longest in the world for a suspension bridge. It will allow a clearance
  • Design and build finance secured for Qatar’s Al Wakrah Bypass Road
    March 14, 2014
    The Public Works Authority (ASHGAL) of Qatar has given Larsen & Toubro (L&T) a contract worth US$599.13 million (INR 36.55 billion) to design and build the Al Wakrah Bybass Road. Scheduled to take 32 months, the high profile project will involve building 11km of road with 10 lanes and four future lane sections with additional collectors/distributor roads, frontage roads and ramps. The new freeway will provide access to the existing and planned developments via five major interchanges comprising of 20 bri