Skip to main content

Shortlist set for Norway’s Sotra PPP project

Sotra Link, Itias and Vis Sotra are vying for the $1.15 billion deal.
By David Arminas May 21, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The proposed four-lane Sotra Connection linking Bergen to Sotra island (photo Statens Vegvesen)

Norway has shortlisted three consortia – Sotra Link, Itias and Vis Sotra – for the US$1.15 billion Sotra tunnel and bridge project in the county of Hordaland.

Sotra Link comprises Spain’s FCC Construcción, Italy’s Webuild (formerly Salini Impregilo), SK Engineering from South Korea and Macquarie Corporate Holdings.

Itias includes Italian contractor Itinera and also its parent company Italian toll road operator ASTM as well as IHI from Japan.

Via Sotra is composed of France’s Vinci Concessions, Vinci Highways, Spain’s Acciona Concesiones, and Implenia Switzerland.

Final choice for the €900 million public-private project, a 25-year finance, build and operate contract, will be made by the end of the year, according to the state road authority Statens Vegvesen. Work will start in early 2021 on the project, officially called the National Road 555 Sotra Connection.

The proposed four-lane Sotra suspension bridge is 29.5m wide and has a 592m main span with the two towers rising 144m above sea level. A separate pedestrian path and separate cycle lane, both 5m wide, were part of the design.

The project overall has 19 other smaller bridges, 11 overpasses/underpasses and 21 tunnel portals. Around 11 tunnels through the mountains were envisaged, from 1-2km longs. Around 24km of access roads are scheduled with nearly 14km of bicycle and pedestrian paths, around 3m wide.

The new bridge is to be built parallel to the existing two-lane 1.2km concrete suspension Sotra Bridge that opened in 1971. It carries around 22,700 daily, estimated to rise to 26,000 by 2024. It crosses Knarreviksundet (Knarrevik Sound) that separates the island of Litlesotra, part of the Sotra archipelago, from the mainland and the city Bergen.

A new bridge is needed because, according to Statens Vegvesen, over the past 15 years there has been a strong increase in traffic between Sotra and Bergen. But old bridge is vulnerable to high winds and is closed when wind speed exceeds 30m/sec.

A tender planned for early last year was cancelled because of geological issues near Lake Storavatnet, noted Jon Georg Dale, minister of transport, at the time. Also, reconstruction of a high-voltage power cable had come under question.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • More cycle paths for Hungary’s tourist areas
    August 9, 2016
    Hungary is to spend around €96 million upgrading and putting in new bicycle paths in major tourist areas. Projects include developing a path connecting the capital Budapest to Lake Balaton in western Hungary and upgrading a path around lake. Also, an unfinished path around Lake Tisza in eastern Hungary, According to an English-language news service, Daily News Hungary. Other planned paths include the Rajka-Dömös, Szentendre-Budapest, Dunakeszi-Budapest and Budapest-Érd-Százhalombatta sections of the E
  • Norway’s tunnels face safety concerns
    December 30, 2020
    Many of Norway’s road tunnels face safety concerns.
  • Metrostav and Bertelsen & Garpestad in E8 deal
    June 9, 2023
    The Norwegian project includes 10km of new road and an 870m-long bridge across the Ram Fjord, part of the European route E8 between Norway and Finland.
  • Delay possible for Chile-Argentina tunnel project
    May 10, 2018
    Delays may be a possibility for the construction of the Agua Negra Tunnel, which will run through the Andes mountain range and connect Argentina and Chile. The tendering process is being held back while further geological studies are carried out. An analysis of the initial geological work carried out so far for the project has highlighted a number of discrepancies with the information gathered. It is known that there are three main fault lines cutting across the intended tunnel route however. The tunnel