Skip to main content

Colombia: more money for Toyo Tunnel Project

The Toyo Tunnel Project – the Guillermo Gaviria Echeverri Tunnel Project - covers 18.3km including new roads and is under construction by Consorcio Antioquia al Mar.
By David Arminas April 4, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The 9.7km-long Toyo Tunnel is the longest in Colombia and running deepest at 900m (image courtesy Gobernacion de Antioquia/Government of Antioquia)

The Colombian government has committed nearly US$144 million to complete the Toyo Tunnel Project in the northwest department of Antioquia.

With a population of around six million, Antioquia is one of the 32 national departments and is located in the central northwest part of Colombia with a narrow section that borders the Caribbean Sea. Most of its territory is mountainous much of which is part of the Andes mountain range.

The Toyo Tunnel Project – also called the Guillermo Gaviria Echeverri Tunnel Project- covers 18.3km connecting the municipalities of Cañasgordas and Giraldo. It includes bridges and the 9.7km-long Toyo Tunnel, the longest in Colombia and running deepest at 900m. It is also is one of many in Colombia’s “fourth-generation (4G) highway network” projects to improve connections nationally.

The Consorcio Antioquia al Mar, a consortium, was awarded the 10-year construction contract in 2015, according to BN Americas, a business intelligence platform that provides information and data solutions to project owners, contractors, suppliers and financial services firms. Consorcio Antioquia al Mar consists of infrastructure contractors Colombiana de Infraestructuras, Carlos Alberto Solarte and CASS Constructores as well as tunnelling civil engineering specialist Estyma Estudios y Manejos

BN Americas  also notes that the agreement between the companies gives Colombiana de Infraestructuras, a subsidiary of Spanish company FCC, 40% ownership and a 20% ownership each for Carlos Alberto Solarte, Estyma Estudios y Manejos and CASS Constructores.

Engineering consultancy WSP worked on final studies and designs in Phase III for Section No. 1 for the consortium. Its work included a transportation study, a soil study for the design of bridge foundations and other retaining structures, a slope stability and stabilisation study, geotechnical study and pavement design, hydraulics analysis and tunnel study and designs.

The consortium also worked with Swedish equipment maker Epiroc for drilling and ventilation strategies. Epiroc's Boomer XE3C and Boomer E2C jumbos with ABC Total Navigation systems have excavated around 1.4 million cubic meters of soil.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Evonik’s top marks for Colombian tourist highway solution
    May 15, 2014
    Leading German road marking product manufacturer Evonik Industries has played a key role in improving safety on a popular Colombian tourist highway, as Guy Woodford reports Bearing the name of the memorable peacemaker governor of Antioquia, the Guillermo Gaviria Correa road, located between the Colombian municipalities of Medellin and San Jerónimo, connects Medellin to the Uraba Gulf part of the Caribbean Sea. In operation since 2007, the road, in combination with the Fernando Gómez Martínez tunnel –
  • Volvo CE’s arduous Andes assignment
    August 20, 2013
    Volvo Construction Equipment is working in some of the world’s most treacherous terrain to construct a high-speed road link across the Andes Mountains. A fleet of 60 Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE) road-building machines is being used to construct a 140km highway across the Andes Mountains, from Bucaramanga, Colombia’s eighth largest city, to Cucuta on the border – providing the country with a much-needed high-speed link with Venezuela. Tasked with this huge undertaking is innovative Colombian hi
  • Date set to complete D1 Višňové Tunnel section
    July 20, 2023
    The D1 section between Lietavská Lúčka and Dubná Skala in Slovakia includes the partially completed 7.5km twin-tube Višňové Tunnel - to be the country's longest.
  • Volvo CE’s arduous Andes assignment
    August 20, 2013
    Volvo Construction Equipment is working in some of the world’s most treacherous terrain to construct a high-speed road link across the Andes Mountains. A fleet of 60 Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE) road-building machines is being used to construct a 140km highway across the Andes Mountains, from Bucaramanga, Colombia’s eighth largest city, to Cucuta on the border – providing the country with a much-needed high-speed link with Venezuela. Tasked with this huge undertaking is innovative Colombian highw