Skip to main content

Remote Russian island benefiting from new road

A remote Russian island is to benefit from a new road connection.
By MJ Woof June 26, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The Russian Government is building a new road on Iturup Island as part of a programme of works to develop its infrastructure – image © courtesy of Mohamed Osama, Dreamstime.com

The remote Russian-controlled Iturup Island is to benefit from a new road connection. This 60km road will run between the island’s biggest town, Kurilsk, and Burevestnik Airport.

Around 3.4km of the road will be surfaced while 2.7km will feature a gravel road construction. The remainder of the road will however be unpaved.

Building the road forms part of a programme of works by the Russian Government to develop infrastructure on the island in a bid to lift its economy. The road is expected to be complete by 2024.

Tourism is a sector expected to benefit from the improved link as the remote island is home to many rare species and of interest to wildlife enthusiasts. The road will also be of benefit to the Russian military forces on the island, which has an airbase.

At present the island’s roads are in poor condition and largely unsurfaced. As a result, drivers often use the beaches along the coast to make journeys.

Iturup Island was previously named Staten Island and is one of the Southern Kurils, the ownership of which is disputed between Russia and Japan. The volcanic island is primarily a nature reserve but is also the world’s primary source of the element rhenium, used as a catalyst and also in gas turbine engine components.
 

Related Content

  • PERI helping to build world’s longest underwater tunnel
    April 4, 2013
    In China, PERI is playing a crucial role in the construction of the world’s longest underwater tunnel The 6km tunnel is part of a new 35km long road connection across the Pearl River bay in southern China, aiming to allow Hong Kong to grow both physically and economically with Macau and also Zhuhai on mainland China. In a huge field factory near the underwater tunnel site, two production lines are being used to produce a total of 33 tunnel elements. Each of the reinforced concrete tubes for the standard sec
  • Brazil infrastructure projects being privatised?
    May 18, 2015
    The Brazilian Government is considering increasing the number of projects being privatised in a bid to boost investment in the country. Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff has suggested increasing the number of federal roads included in the privatisation programme from four to 11. The economic team has presented 20 new road stretches to be considered for inclusion in the programme. These routes will be studied in order to determine which will generate the most interest from the private sector, with six or se
  • Effective stabilisation
    February 24, 2012
    Contractor BAM Nuttall and specialist piling sub contractor Aarsleff Piling, have been working closely to develop a cost-effective solution to a tricky piling problem. The two firms have developed an alternative and versatile technique to reduce the risk of delays installing 2,150 precast concrete piles along part of the route of an innovative guided busway in Cambridgeshire in the UK.
  • Graphene-enhanced pavements join UK Live Labs programme
    September 1, 2020
    While some parts of the world are on pause, road construction and new technology trials are still underway, as these stories demonstrate - Kristina Smith reports