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

  • Lidl by Lidl, more rental bikes in Berlin
    November 14, 2016
    German discount supermarket chain Lidl is to sponsor 3,500 new rental bicycles in Berlin. The bicycle system Lidl Bikes will be operated by DB Rent, a subsidiary of German railway provider Deutsche Bahn (DB), and be available from spring next year. DB Rent, which has been running rental bicycles for nearly 15 years, is operating around 10,000 bicycles in 50 German cities. The system of flexible borrowing will cover Berlin's S-Bahn commuter train region. But from the end of 2017 Lidl Bikes will face
  • New Italian highway project commencing
    February 7, 2023
    Work on a new Italian highway project is commencing.
  • Myanmar elevated expressway project progress
    December 13, 2018
    Interest is strong in the project to build the Yangon Elevated Expressway Project in Myanmar. In all 12 firms applied during the tender process, with 10 companies having subsequently been shortlisted by Myanmar’s Construction Ministry. The project aims to reduce Yangon’s chronic traffic congestion issues. The shortlisted firms include companies from China, France, Japan, South Korea and Thailand, with some working together in consortia. The project is being managed jointly by the Construction Ministry and t
  • Austria's new tunnel meets safety regulations
    July 13, 2012
    New safety regulations and high traffic volumes require new tunnel construction all across Europe. Mike Woof reports Anew highway tunnel now being built in Austria will boost traffic volumes and safety standards on a key European route. The existing Pfänder Tunnel lies close to Austria's borders with Germany and Switzerland and carries a heavy traffic volume, so a new parallel tunnel is under construction to help spread this load, increasing capacity as well as safety. Stringent tunnel safety standards have