Skip to main content

New highways to improve Austria's connections

A massive highway project will boost Austria's international links. The €933 million Ostergion PPP motorway project is one of the largest PPP projects currently in operation in Europe. The financers of the project are AMBAC and EIB, while the routine maintenance activities are headed by Egis. The project intends to ease congestion Austria's capital, Vienna, improve commuter traffic, enhance road connections between Austria and the Czech Republic and increase safety on congested B roads around the country.
March 6, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A massive highway project will boost Austria's international links. The €933 million Ostergion PPP motorway project is one of the largest PPP projects currently in operation in Europe.

The financers of the project are 3645 AMBAC and 1054 European Investment Bank (EIB), while the routine maintenance activities are headed by 2643 Egis. The project intends to ease congestion Austria's capital, Vienna, improve commuter traffic, enhance road connections between Austria and the Czech Republic and increase safety on congested B roads around the country.

The PPP Ostregion Package comprises four road expansion projects for 113km of new road construction, representing a network of urban and inter-urban highways in the vicinity of Austria's capital. The project is part of the Austrian Transport Infrastructure Master Plan, as well as being part of the Trans European Network. In December 2006, Asfinag, the Austrian highway agency, awarded Project Y to Bonaventura, a Special Purpose Vehicle sponsored by 981 Hochtief PPP Solutions, 2859 Alpine Mayreder and 2376 EGIS Projects.

Under the agreement, Bonaventura will plan, construct, finance and operate the project for 32 years. While the total project cost is €933 million, it has a capital expenditure of €776 million. The revenues will be a mix of availability and shadow toll payments by Asfinag. International consultancy 3449 EC Harris will provide long term control and risk monitoring on the highway project. Under the terms of its deal, EC Harris will monitor the operational performance of the motorway to ensure that the project remains financially stable and generates the predicted revenues over the next 28 years. During the operation and maintenance phase EC Harris will provide regular advice to the lenders on topics including compliance matters, performance levels, income generation and maintenance activities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • No Vienna-Prague link in Austria-Czech road agreement
    October 2, 2014
    A direct motorway between Austria’s capital, Vienna, and the Czech Republic capital, Prague, is not part of a new agreement on road connections between the two nations. The agreement formed by Austrian and Czech transport ministers Erwin Pröll and Antonin Prachar states that a four-lane A5 motorway will only go as far as Poysbrunn on the Austrian side, and will then continue with two lanes towards the Czech border. The overall road link is due to be completed in 2017.
  • Programme finalised for ASECAP Days in Madrid
    April 22, 2025
    Just a month to go before the 52nd ASECAP Days conference kicks off at the stylish NH Collection Madrid Eurobuilding hotel in the Spanish capital Madrid.
  • Financial close reached for A9 Gaasperdammerweg motorway work
    November 25, 2014
    Financial close has been reached for expansion of the A9 motorway near Amsterdam in the Netherlands. BNG Bank, DZ BANK, ING, KBC, SMBC and Société Général have made available a short-term debt of US$174 million (€140 million) and half of the long-term debt of nearly $509 million (€410 million). The European Investment Bank will provide the other half of the long-term debt. Mott MacDonald is the lenders’ technical advisor to the consortium IXAS Zuid-Oost, which has the public-private contract to expand
  • Chinese firm wins highways expansion project to decongest Nairobi
    January 5, 2017
    A Chinese contractor is carrying out a major road project intended to cut congestion in Kenyan capital Nairobi – Shem Oirere writes Chinese contractor China Wu Yi has won a US$163 million contract for the reconstruction and expansion of a 25km highway leading out of Kenya’s capital Nairobi with financing from the World Bank. The contract was awarded by the country’s National Highways Authority (KeNHA), a state-owned road agency responsible for the management, development, rehabilitation and maintenance of i