Skip to main content

Denmark reconsiders a Kattegat link

A bridge would cross the Kattegat Strait between the Jutland peninsula city of Aarhus - Denmark’s second largest city after the capital Copenhagen - and Kalundborg, a small city of 17,000 on the western shore of Zealand Island.
By David Arminas May 10, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
A proposed Kattegat Link would make redundant fast ferries to and from the small island of Samsø – a landing point for a combined road and rail bridge connecting the Jutland peninsula and the island of Zealand (image © Ricochet69/Dreamstime)

The Danish government is again considering the feasability of a Kattegat link that would connect the country’s main Jutland peninsula with the Island of Zealand.

Such a combined road and rail bridge would cross the 35km Kattegat Strait between the Jutland city of Aarhus, with a population of around 540,000 – Denmark’s second largest city after the capital Copenhagen - and Kalundborg, a small city of 17,000 on the western shore of Zealand.

The economic driver for such a link is that it would create a direct route between Copenhagen on Zealand’s eastern coast to Aarhus, running westerly across Zealand to Kalundborg. From there it would be a bridge what would be constructed via Samsø , a small  island in the Kattegat Sea. In effect, there would be two section of the link - Kalundborg to Samsø and Samsø to Aarhus.

According to a recent report in the Danish newspaper Dagbladet Licitationen the estimated cost of the project is around €14.68 billion (US$16.24 billion).

In 2014, the transport ministry estimated that traffic volumes between Zealand and Jutland would not be enough to warrant a Kattegat Bridge – costing around €11.8 billion - until about 2050.

Thomas Danielsen, Denmark’s minister of transport, recently said that before any announcement about the feasability of such a project is made, there would have to be cross-party support in the Danish Parliament for building the link. The issue is part of a transportation debate in the country’s parliament this week

The previous government announced last summer that there a link’s environmental impact could mean that it would never be built.

In March 2020, COWI submitted studies for a combined road and rail connection across Kattegat, applying different corridors from central Zealand to Aarhus via Samsø. According to COWI, further work has assessed road and rail infrastructure in Jutland and on Zealand as well as studying technical solutions between the coasts of Zealand and Jutland including corridors via Sjællands Odde.

“The purpose is to weigh up the pros and cons of the different corridors,” says a note on the company’s website, “and to prepare a solid basis for further political discussion about the next steps, including whether to proceed with an environmental impact assessment for the Kattegat project.”

The project involving onshore infrastructure is carried out for the Danish Road Directorate along with the Danish Transport, Construction and Housing Authority. The study on the offshore technical solutions is carried out for Sund & Bælt. For the project, COWI has been working with the architectural firms Dissing+Weitling and Hasløv & Kjærsgaard as subconsultants.

Successive governments over the past two decades have considered a Kattegat Bridge that would supplement the 18km Great Belt Fixed Link  – Storebæltsbroen. It crosses the Great Belt strait between Zealand and Funen – Denmark’s third largest island and close to the southeastern end of the Jutland peninsula as it joins mainland Europe at a border with Germany. Great Belt Fixed Link consists of a road suspension bridge, a railway tunnel between Zealand and the small island Sprogø in the middle of the Great Belt and a box-girder bridge for both road and rail traffic between Sprogø and Funen.

Denmark is currently constructing one of Europe’s largest transportation infrastructure projects, the immersed Fehmarn Belt road and rail tunnel between Denmark and Germany. It will run18km tunnel under the Baltic Sea, between the Danish island of Lolland and the German island of Fehmarn.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Second bascule bridge for Lowestoft
    December 10, 2020
    Total cost of the North Sea coastal project is around €160 million.
  • Turkey tenders for 1915 Canakkale Bridge work
    October 31, 2016
    Turkey will open tenders this month for a bridge at the southwestern end of the Sea of Marmara and around 200km south of Istanbul. The Canakkale 1915 Bridge will span the Dardanelles Strait close to the city of Canakkale and where ferries cross the stretch of water. The suspension bridge will be further north, between the towns of Gelibolu in East Thrace on the European side of the Dardanelles and Lapseki in Troas on the Asian side. The bridge will be part of the Kınalı-Tekirdağ-Çanakkale-Balıkesir mo
  • Building Georgia’s transport connections to its neighbours
    October 26, 2016
    Georgia’s government aspires to turn the country into a regional transport-transit hub, and with renovated and expanded transportation infrastructure it knows that the country can offer significant opportunities to others in the region, and globally – Gordon Feller writes The Caucasus Transit Corridor (CTC) is the key transit-route between Western Europe and Central Asia for oil and gas, as well as dry cargo. CTC is part of TRACECA (TRAnsport Corridor Europe to Central Asia). This is the shortest route
  • US$153 million road upgrade underway in New Zealand
    April 15, 2024
    A US$153 million road upgrade project is now underway in New Zealand.