Skip to main content

Russian highway deal awarded

In Russia the contractor Primorsky UPK is to construct a highway connecting Primorsk with the A-181 Skandinavia Highway. The 42km highway is expected to cust US$375.3 million to build and should be ready for traffic by 2022. The contract also includes rebuilding a stretch of the existing Primorskoe Highway. Another portion of the work will be to build a 74m overpass over the Primorskoe Highway and the rail link connecting Primorsk to Ermilovo.
October 14, 2019 Read time: 1 min

In Russia the contractor Primorsky UPK is to construct a highway connecting Primorsk with the A-181 Skandinavia Highway. The 42km highway is expected to cust US$375.3 million to build and should be ready for traffic by 2022. The contract also includes rebuilding a stretch of the existing Primorskoe Highway. Another portion of the work will be to build a 74m overpass over the Primorskoe Highway and the rail link connecting Primorsk to Ermilovo.

Related Content

  • Colombia dual carriageway concession awarded
    January 29, 2021
    A key Colombian dual carriageway concession has been awarded.
  • Kewatkhali Bridge construction to start
    October 11, 2023
    The project in Bangladesh for the steel arch bridge includes a 6.2km four-lane approach road.
  • New Qatar highway planned
    August 25, 2016
    Construction of a new 10 lane highway is due to start shortly in Qatar and the project is expected to cost in the region of US$2.1 billion to complete. The new Al Khor Expressway project looks set to be built by a Turkish contractor Tefken Holding, following the completion of the tender process. The 34km highway will feature eight intersections, as well as a number of viaducts, overpasses and underpasses. The project also includes the construction of separated facilities for pedestrians and cyclists. The hi
  • Implementation of road building projects in Russia’s Moscow may be significantly delayed
    May 15, 2014
    Implementation of some large-scale investment projects for road building in Russia’s capital Moscow may be significantly delayed A series of major documentation issues are the cause of the problem. These have delayed projects for up to nine tenders on the total sum of US$2.6 billion (95 billion rubles), with anomalies having been found by the Russian Federal Anti-Monopoly Service.