Skip to main content

Project building new Biobio bridge in Chile on track

Construction work on the fourth bridge spanning Chile’s Biobio Bridge is proceeding on schedule. The project site is located in Chile’s Gran Concepcion area. Construction could commence in 2016, with completion expected in 2018. Environmental studies have yet to be completed however. The work will be carried out as part of a concession package and the bridge is expected to cost some US$214 million to construct, carrying two lanes for vehicle traffic as well as claiming pedestrian and cycling connectivity. T
August 28, 2014 Read time: 2 mins

Construction work on the fourth bridge spanning Chile’s Biobio Bridge is proceeding on schedule. The project site is located in Chile’s Gran Concepcion area. Construction could commence in 2016, with completion expected in 2018. Environmental studies have yet to be completed however. The work will be carried out as part of a concession package and the bridge is expected to cost some US$214 million to construct, carrying two lanes for vehicle traffic as well as claiming pedestrian and cycling connectivity. The design of the structure has yet to be finalised but the bridge itself will feature a 2.5km long section over the river, while the project length will be 6km due to the need to construct access roads. The new Biobio Bridge will be Chile’s longest, until the country’s Chacao Crossing is completed. The bridge is expected to carry a great deal of truck traffic between Talcahuano and Coronel and will be tolled, although Chile’s Truck Owner’s Association has complained that the projected tolls are now more costly than originally proposed. The northern access for the new bridge will be at the river mouth in Hualpen while to the south it will connect to the Los Batros Bridge in San Pedro de la Paz.

Related Content

  • Philippines mega project for highway and bridge
    May 8, 2017
    Plans in the Philippines are being set out for a highway and bridge mega-project. The proposals call for a 388km highway from Northern Samar to Lucena, Quezon Province. The bridge would span the San Bernardino Strait and connect Allen in Northern Samar Province on Samar Island with Matnog on the Bicol Peninsula in Sorsogon Province. The new highway would also connect capital Manila with Albay, Camarines Sur and Camarines Norte provinces as well as the South Luzon Expressway (SLEx). In all the work could cos
  • Safety issues fuel interest at PIARC’s tunnel conference in Lyon
    June 4, 2019
    Alternative fuel and automated vehicle issues occupied minds at PIARC’s first international road tunnel safety conference. David Arminas reports from Lyon More than ever, tunnel management must done in a wholistic fashion, said Andre Broto, president of PIARC, the World Road Association, based in Paris. With those sentiments, Broto kicked off PIARC’s first International Conference on Tunnel Operations and Safety. One of the first speakers, Sandrine Bernabei Chinzi, head of transport infrastructure at Fr
  • Australian mega link route opens
    November 29, 2012
    Australia’s largest and most complex transport infrastructure project in the city of Brisbane has been officially opened to traffic. The first vehicles have now used the Airport Link, Northern Busway (Windsor to Kedron) and Airport Roundabout Upgrade projects, which together form an extensive US$5.85 billion transport project. The project in Australia’s third most populous city in the state of Queensland comprises a toll road and dedicated busway route, together involving almost 12km of tunnels (described
  • New tolled highway plans for Indonesia
    November 1, 2012
    The authorities in Indonesia have set out extensive plans to source funding for new tolled highways. In all seven highway projects have been identified as crucial to expanding the network and improving connectivity for the Indonesian islands of Sulawesi, Java and Sumatra. Some US$25 billion in loans from overseas has been sourced by the Public Works Ministry of Indonesia.