Skip to main content

Bulgaria breaks ground for Martisa River bridge

The contract was awarded to local engineering firm GBS-Infrastructure Construction in Plovdiv, a subsidiary of the Bulgarian civil engineering group Glavbolgarstroy.
By David Arminas August 23, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
The ceremonial sod-turning earlier this month for the start of construction of a bridge between Parvomai and the village of Gradina in Bulgaria (image courtesy Glavbolgarstroy Infrastructure Construction)

Bulgaria's Road Infrastructure Agency (RIA) has broken ground for a two-lane €8.6 million bridge to be built over the Maritsa River.

The contract was awarded to local company GBS-Infrastructure Construction, a subsidiary of civil engineering group Glavbolgarstroy, the agency said in a press release. Local company T7 Consult has won the construction supervision contract and Consortium Beta Cyclop will be in charge of technical design supervision.

The 228m-long bridge will cross the river as part of the secondary road connecting the village of Plodovitovo to the larger town of Assenovgrad, both east of the city of Plovdiv. It will establish a direct link between the Trakia motorway and the first-class road I-8 Plovdiv – Haskovo highway. The Trakia motorway, or Thrace motorway, designated A1, connects the capital city of Sofia, the city of Plovdiv and the city of Burgas on the Black Sea coast.

The new bridge will have a width of 10.5m allowing for two 3.5m-wide vehicle lanes and two 1.75m-wide pedestrian and cycle ways. On-site construction work will take around one year.

The existing single-lane bridge is near the town of Parvomai was built more than 90 years ago and vehicles only up to five tonnes are allowed to cross.

Yasen Yordanov, chairman of Bulgaria’s Road Infrastructure Agency, noted that the new bridge will adopt an orthotropic structure, combining steel with reinforced concrete - a novel construction method for Bulgaria. "What's noteworthy here is the fusion of reinforced concrete and metal in the construction. With a total span of 228m, this bridge will facilitate two-way traffic through this highly congested stretch."

An orthotropic bridge or orthotropic deck typically consists of a structural steel deck plate stiffened either longitudinally with ribs or transversely, or in both directions. This allows the fabricated deck both to directly bear vehicular loads and to contribute to the bridge structure's overall load-bearing behaviour.

Orthotropic decks permit a very shallow deck depth which reduces the steepness of approach gradients and hence their costs. The form is also widely used on bascule and other moveable bridges where significant savings in the cost of the mechanical elements can be made where a lighter deck is used.

Nikolay Mitkov, mayor of Parvomai Municipality, called the ceremony an “historic occasion” that has been eagerly anticipated. “The bridge constructed by our forebears 95 years ago has visibly deteriorated and become outdated. We're commencing the construction of a modern two-lane bridge, a crucial conduit for the smooth flow of vehicular traffic.”

Earlier this month, the Road Infrastructure Agency launched seven public tenders worth an estimated €434.3 million in total for 18-month contracts for repairs and maintenance of the country's road network.

The 480km-long Maritsa or Maritza River has its source in western Bulgaria, flowing east and then south whereupon leaving Bulgaria it becomes the border between Greece and Turkey - called the Meriç in Turkish and Evros in Greek. It is one of the largest rivers in Europe by discharge and empties into the Aegean Sea.

Related Content

  • Peerless performance for Aggregate Industries on Nene Bridge job
    June 4, 2019
    Aggregate Industries is supplying its Lytacrete secondary aggregate solution for the US$6.5 million Nene Bridge structural refurbishment project near Peterborough, England.
  • Highway developments to boost east-west transport
    April 4, 2012
    Huge highway developments are being planned and carried out to further improve East-West transport, with Central Asia a key region as Patrick Smith reports History was made in late 2010, when one of the biggest road building projects ever envisaged in Eastern Europe was given the green-light. It was the occasion when Russian president Dmitry Medvedev signed a law that would allow his country to build its segment of a huge highway around the Black Sea. The idea is to complete the 7,140km highway, wi
  • Scotland’s new Queensferry Crossing over the Forth Estuary
    December 23, 2015
    The new Queensferry Crossing under construction in Scotland will be the third landmark bridge spanning the Forth Estuary - Mike Woof writes When the new Queensferry Crossing over the Forth Estuary opens at the end of 2016, it will be the third landmark bridge to be built spanning this short stretch of water. Lying alongside the existing road bridge and the historic rail bridge, this new structure will be as groundbreaking as the two earlier crossings were at the time of their construction.
  • Bulgaria lets contract for Struma Motorway’s Zheleznitsa Tunnel
    February 15, 2019
    A consortium including local firms GP Group, Global Construction and Via Plan will build the 2km Zheleznitsa Tunnel, part of the Struma Motorway. The contract is worth around €97.5 million and the tunnel will be the longest in Bulgaria. The EU Cohesion Fund will co-finance the project, along with the Bulgarian government under the Operational Programme Transport and Transport Infrastructure 2014-2020. Completion is set for the end of 2023. Two previous tender processes to award the construction con