Skip to main content

Metrostav Norge's Faroe tunnel on target

Metrostav Norge won the contract to connect the villages of Fámjin and Ørðavík on Suðuroy Island, part of the Faroes, in 2022.
By David Arminas December 18, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Every tunnel helps: around 80% of the Faroes population is connected by tunnels (image © Niels Melander/Dreamstime)

Work continues by the Czech construction firm Metrostav on a 1.2km tunnel in the Danish Faroe Islands.

The Metrostav Group, through its subsidiary Metrostav Norge, won the contract to connect the villages of Fámjin and Ørðavík in the autumn of 2022. Less than 90 people live in the area which is on Suðuroy Island, one of  in the Faroes island group.

The tunnel is being built using the Norwegian drill-and-blast tunnelling method. Around 220 of the company's employees are on site. According to the company, the deal is worth around €8.8 million. The tunnel is being excavated from a portal located above the village of Ørðavík. Included in the work of Metrostav Norge is grouting and the installation of around 9,000m² water and frost insulation. Around 4,275m³ of shotcrete will have been used upon completion.

The main client is Landsverk, the Faroes highways agency responsible for building, operating and maintain the country’s highway infrastructure.

The Faroe island group in the North Sea is around 320km north of the UK and about halfway between Norway and Iceland. The country is an autonomous  self-governing region of Denmark and legislates and governs independently in a wide range of areas. The country is rugged and has a subpolar oceanic climate - windy, wet, cloudy and cool. Temperatures are moderated by the Gulf Stream, averaging above freezing throughout the year.

Road tunnels – there are no rail services in the island group – are an important part of the transport infrastructure. Around 80% of the population is connected by tunnels through the mountains and between the islands, bridges and causeways that link together the three largest islands and three other islands to the northeast. While the other two large islands to the south, Sandoy and Suðuroy, are connected to the main area with ferries, the small islands Koltur and Stóra Dímun have no ferry connection, only a helicopter service

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • China's massive bridge opens
    February 15, 2012
    The world's largest bridge over water is now open to traffic. Measuring over 42km long the bridge links China's eastern port city of Qingdao with Huangdao Island.
  • US$270 million Indian road tunnel open
    January 16, 2025
    A key US$270 million Indian road tunnel is now open.
  • Norway’s Nye Veier will tender 23km of motorway
    May 7, 2019
    Norwegian state-owned road developer Nye Veier has announced the tendering of a 23km four-lane motorway between Roterud and Storhove along Lake Mjøsa. Mjøsa, Norway's largest lake as well as one of the deepest in all Europe is located in the southern part of the country and about 100km north of the capital Oslo. It is around 117km long and at its widest is 15km. More than 4km of the €388 million project will be a tunnel. Construction is scheduled to begin in 2021. The stretch of road is as part of
  • Seven bids submitted for Croatia’s Peljeski bridge access roads
    June 18, 2018
    Croatia’s construction company Integral Inzinjering has submitted the lowest bid of €43 million for construction of access roads for the Peljeski bridge project. Croatian daily newspaper Vecernji List reported that seven bidsd were submitted for the 12.4km project. Highest bid of €88 million has come from China Road and Bridge Corporation, which has the contract to build the bridge. Austria's Strabag offered €65 million. Other bidders were France's Colas, Croatia's GP Krk in cooperation with the Bosni