Skip to main content

Cost rises again for Columbia’s unfinished La Linea tunnel

Columbia’s transport minister has said it will take nearly US$168 million and more than two years to finish the controversial La Linea tunnel. Natalia Abello Vives said the government has a “plan B” to finish the 8.65km tunnel, which, as World Highways reported in May, has less than a kilometre remaining to be constructed. It was originally scheduled to be open by last November. The La Linea tunnel project, or Segundo Centenario tunnel, crosses the central mountain range and forms part of the Bogota-B
February 3, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Columbia’s transport minister has said it will take nearly US$168 million and more than two years to finish the controversial La Linea tunnel.

Natalia Abello Vives said the government has a “plan B” to finish the 8.65km tunnel, which, as 3260 World Highways reported in May, has less than a kilometre remaining to be constructed. It was originally scheduled to be open by last November.

The La Linea tunnel project, or Segundo Centenario tunnel, crosses the central mountain range and forms part of the Bogota-Buenaventura corridor. The link, which will be the longest road tunnel in Latin America, will connect Calarca and Cajamarca in the central Corderilla of the Colombian Andes Mountains.

But the tunnel project has met with numerous challenges -- technical, geophysical, financial and legal. Altitude has made work on site difficult, with two tunnel portals at around 2,500m above sea level.

Last December, World Highways reported that the Segundo Centenario consortium, which is building the tunnel, want to push ahead with construction and it would take around $60 million to finish the project.

A new plan involves the incorporation of local firm Construcciones e Inversiones Beta, which would acquire a 40% stake in the venture and deliver more capital as required. There are also plans to bring in two strategic partners, the cement firms Cementos Argos and 3016 Cemex. These companies could offer credit lines for the materials such as cement, concrete and steel.

In addition, construction firm Carlos Collins, part of the Segundo Centenario consortium, could transfer funds from the Bogota-Girardot project, in which it also has a stake, into La Linea. The consortium has asked for 13 months to complete work on the tunnel.

Details of the road and tunnel construction were featured in World Highways %$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 17519 0 oLinkExternal last May Visit &quot;tunnel for colombias calarca cajamarca highway&quot; page false /sections/emergent/features/tunnel-for-colombias-calarca-cajamarca-highway/ false false%>.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Ethiopia announces three road projects worth over $240 million
    April 17, 2015
    In Ethiopia, three road projects worth over US$240 million will be built as part of the country's fourth road sector development plan. The government will fund the projects using its own resources. The first project is the 83km Sodo-Tercha asphalt-concrete project, costing around $84 million and to be built by China Railway Seventh Group. Completion is scheduled for 19 months. The second project, worth $102 million is the 99km Bilbela-Sekota road project, scheduled to take 39 months and to be built
  • Replace bridge for Vancouver’s Massey Tunnel could aid congestion
    December 21, 2015
    Opponents of a proposed 10-lane bridge near Vancouver, Canada, said the structure will encourage urban sprawl in a region that is already struggling with a booming population. The British Columbia provincial government recently opened the final round of public consultation for the planned 3.3km toll bridge likely to cost around US$2.54 billion.
  • Hi-viz hijinks make a flockery of saftey clothing
    September 16, 2015
    Fashionable they aren’t, but the wearing of high-visibility clothing is increasingly either recommended by businesses or made mandatory by law, especially for construction workers on every kind of site. But has the use of “hi-vis” clothing, especially the vest, gone too far? In Britain, the wearing of the hi-viz clothing has taken off - literally, according to a BBC television news report that shows a flock of chickens wearing the fluorescent coloured vest.
  • Call for Abstracts, for IRF Europe & Central Asia Regional Congress
    March 9, 2015
    Istanbul is often said to be where Europe meets Asia, geographically and culturally. This September the great city will also be the focus of the International Road Federation’s 1st Europe & Central Asia Regional Congress. The congress will be an exceptional opportunity for anyone, especially from Europe and Asia, involved in major road projects to connect and network with ministers, road agency heads and local government leaders. But time is running out to be among the prestigious speakers and presenters at