Skip to main content

Bypass planning for Salo in Finland

Cost of the 4km project, includes eight bridges, is an estimated €40 million.
By David Arminas November 21, 2022 Read time: 1 min
Picturesque Salo in Finland’s south-west corner: small city, but big traffic (© Milla Rasila/Dreamstime)

Finland’s Transport Infrastructure Agency (FTIA) has granted around €1 million for planning of the northern section of the eastern bypass in Salo for 2023.

The planning phase is expected to begin in spring next year and be completed in autumn 2024, with the government choosing an option for construction sometime in 2025, according to Finnish media reports.

The cost of the 4km road project, which includes eight bridges, is estimated at €40 million.

Salo, located on the south-western tip of Finland, has a population of around 52,000. Because of its location – 115km from the capital Helsinki and 50km from the provincial capital Turku – it lies on a major goods transportation route. European route E18 runs through Salo, passing the city centre a few kilometres to the north, but the national road 52 between Raseborg and Somero goes through the city centre.

In 2016, Salo signed a letter of intent with Los Angeles-based company Virgin Hyperloop One in order to launch a project to build a 50km  Hyperloop tube between Salo and Turku.

Salo had a large consumer electronics and mobile phone industry, with a manufacturing plant operated by Nokia – once the towns dominant employer - and briefly by Microsoft Mobile in the 2010s until it was shut down.

Related Content

  • Stockholm’s new bypass
    March 8, 2021
    Tunnels make up 18km of the 21km of the Swedish capital’s E4 Bypass mega-project. It will have taken 15 years from start to opening in 2030, if all goes well
  • Burkina Faso improves Ouahigouya connection
    July 25, 2022
    The work is part of the government’s 2021-2025 RND plan to improve national roads.
  • Finnish Motorway Finally finished: Finland's M1
    July 23, 2012
    It has taken a long time to complete, but a vital motorway link is open to traffic as Heikki Harri reports After almost 50 years of construction, the M1 motorway linking Helsinki, the Finnish capital city and Turku, the country's old capital in the southwest, is finally completed. It did not take all 50 years of construction but the first section from Helsinki towards the west was constructed in the mid -1960s. Then there was a pause until mid-1990s when the works resumed section by section. The final sect
  • Bechtel, Ukravtodor in Kiev bypass agreement
    June 11, 2021
    Design work for the 150km bypass is underway, as well as land acquisition.