Skip to main content

Sweden and Denmark consider link between Helsingør and Helsingborg

Sweden and Denmark are considering a fixed link between Helsingør and Helsingborg, either a a road, railway or road-rail. The link would cross The Øresund, a straight separating the two countries that is only 6.7km wide between the Danish city of Helsingør and the Swedish city of Helsingborg. Investigations, likely to cost around €2.3 million including €1 million from the European Union, will start this month with a final report by 2020.
July 2, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
A Helsingør to Helsingborg bridge could take traffic off the Øresund bridge (pictured) that opened in 2000
Sweden and Denmark are considering a fixed link between Helsingør and Helsingborg, either a a road, railway or road-rail.


The link would cross The Øresund, a straight separating the two countries that is only 6.7km wide between the Danish city of Helsingør and the Swedish city of Helsingborg.

Investigations, likely to cost around €2.3 million including €1 million from the European Union, will start this month with a final report by 2020.

The completion in 2000 of the Øresund Bridge to the south, linking Copenhagen and Malmö, lessened the importance of Helsingør and Helsingborg ferry link but they ships still operate almost non-stop on this short route. The vessels carry man foot-passengers looking for days out in the two cities. For many drivers the ferry crossing saves driving distance compared to using The Øresund toll bridge.

Helsingør, known in English as Elsinore, has a population of around 62,000 and lies 45kkm from the capital Copenhagen. The city’s Kronborg castle is believed to have been the template for the setting of Hamlet by William Shakespeare.

Helsingborg, with a population of around 140,00, lies 555km to the south of the Swedish capital Stockholm.

The Øresund – a road and rail structure - runs along an 8km cable-stayed bridge to an artificial island where it then enters a 4km-long tunnel. It features two 204m-high pylons supporting the 490m-long bridge span across the Flinte Channel. The motorway runs on the upper level while the railway runs underneath.

Most bridge structures including the piers and spans were built on land and towed into position on barges. Only the pylons were cast in situ. The Øresund is operated by both countries and was designed by Danish engineering firm 2349 COWI along with main architect George KS Rotne.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sunderland’s Northern Spire bridge opens
    August 28, 2018
    Sunderland’s Northern Spire bridge with its 105m-high central A-frame pylon opens to traffic today after a four-month delay because of poor weather. The bridge opened for pedestrians and cyclists yesterday after three Sunderland-built Nissan vehicles first crossed the bridge during a ceremony to mark completion of the project. Work began in May 2015 and the bridge has been built within its allocated €129 million budget. However, poor weather conditions pushed back the opening of the bridge from this past
  • Seven bids submitted for Croatia’s Peljeski bridge access roads
    June 18, 2018
    Croatia’s construction company Integral Inzinjering has submitted the lowest bid of €43 million for construction of access roads for the Peljeski bridge project. Croatian daily newspaper Vecernji List reported that seven bidsd were submitted for the 12.4km project. Highest bid of €88 million has come from China Road and Bridge Corporation, which has the contract to build the bridge. Austria's Strabag offered €65 million. Other bidders were France's Colas, Croatia's GP Krk in cooperation with the Bosni
  • France’s ageing bridge problem highlighted
    August 17, 2018
    The recent fatal bridge disaster in the Italian city of Genoa has triggered questions being asked about the state of France’s bridges. And with around 33% of France’s 12,000 or so bridges now known to require repairs, there is an understandable cause for concern.