Skip to main content

Plans moving forward for key Turkish highway

Plans are moving forward in Turkey for the construction of a new highway project. Mott MacDonald has been named lenders’ technical advisor by the IC Ictas-Astaldi (ICA) consortium for a 60km section of the Northern Marmara highway. This deal is significant and the stretch forms the first of a number of phases of the highway. The project is being delivered under a 10 year, US$2.5 billion public-private partnership (PPP).
October 11, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Istanbul is on record as one of the world's most traffic-congested cities
Plans are moving forward in Turkey for the construction of a new highway project. 2579 Mott MacDonald has been named lenders’ technical advisor by the IC Ictas-Astaldi (ICA) consortium for a 60km section of the Northern Marmara highway. This deal is significant and the stretch forms the first of a number of phases of the highway. The project is being delivered under a 10 year, US$2.5 billion public-private partnership (PPP).
 
The project involves the design, construction, maintenance and operation of the 60km dual four lane Northern Marmara highway between Odayeri and Paşaköy. It includes construction of 55km of connecting roads, 19 motorway junctions, 67 viaducts, and seven tunnels and a road/rail stay cable stiffened suspension bridge across the Bosphorus. The new bridge, designed by Michel Virlogeux and Swiss consultant T-Engineering, will be a combined road and rail suspension with a main span of 1.4km. It will be the first long span bridge to accommodate an eight lane highway and a two line railway on the same level, giving it a width of 59m. The structure will also have the world’s tallest towers, at over 320m.
 
Mott MacDonald will carry out a technical due diligence review of the project documentation produced by concession company ICA up to financial close. This will include a review of the transaction documents, design, construction methodology, operation and maintenance proposals, budget, programme, payment mechanism and risk analysis. Following financial close, Mott MacDonald will undertake construction and operations monitoring on behalf of lenders.
 
The new east-west route should alleviate congestion on existing routes across Istanbul, including the two existing bridges across the Bosphorus.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New coastal highway route for Reunion
    July 15, 2016
    Work on a new €1.7 billion coastal road is underway around France’s Reunion Island This new 12.3km highway (Route du Littoral) will have three lanes in each direction when it is complete in 2018. The new offshore highway connects Saint Denis, the administrative capital of La Réunion, with La Possession.
  • IRF Global Road Achievement Awards Laureate city Road Improvement Project
    November 30, 2015
    Thiruvananthapuram, the capital city of Kerala (India) had been witnessing rapid urbanisation. The government of Kerala implemented the Thiruvananthapuram City Road Improvement Project (TRCIP) to widen the existing 42km of existing road network to cater the needs of rapid urbanisation.
  • Northern Spire wins award from UK’s Association for Project Management
    November 30, 2018
    The Northern Spire bridge in Sunderland, northern England, has beaten off stiff competition to win another national construction and engineering award. The Spire, which opened in August this year at a cost of €132 million, was named Project of the Year: Engineering, Construction and Infrastructure 2018 by the UK’s Association for Project Management. The award is the latest honour for Sunderland’s 105m-tall cable-stayed bridge which links Castletown on the north side of the River Wear with Pallion.
  • UK: Work starts on Mersey Gateway main bridge deck
    June 2, 2016
    Work has started on 2.2km Mersey Gateway’s main bridge deck as the project enters its third year of construction. The new six-lane toll bridge will link the English towns of Runcorn and Widnes and teams will begin to connect the steel support cables to the deck and upper pylons this summer. Trinity, the project’s movable scaffolding system (MSS), has cast the first 250m of the north approach viaduct and a new MSS is on its way to Halton to build the south approach viaduct. The local road network is al