Skip to main content

Skanska wins E18 section near Oslo

Construction of 660m of the Høvik Tunnel is included in the contract, as well as a cycle path.
By David Arminas June 19, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Noise barriers on the western approach to the Høvik Tunnel – under construction and just outside Oslo - will have solar panels mounted on them (image courtesy Aas-Jakobsen AS/Statens vegvesen)

Skanska Norway has won a contract to construct 2.3km of the new E18 in Bærum, a municipality in the greater Oslo area.

The deal covers the section between Fornbebukrysset and Strand and will have six lanes, of which one lane in each direction will be reserved for public transport and heavy vehicles. Construction of 660m of the Høvik Tunnel is included in the contract, as well as a cycle path.

The existing E18 in the area carries around 90,000 vehicles daily.

Under a different contract, construction of the Høvik Tunnel started in January. Most of the tunnel – around 1.75km – will run though rock and Skanska will be constructing in concrete an extension to the structure.

According to the Norwegian Public Roads Administration, Statens vegvesen, when the Høvik Tunnel is completed in a few years' time, the tunnel portal from the west will be illuminated using power from solar cells that will be situated on 7m-high noise barriers running along the E18.

However, the agency said installation of both noise barriers and solar panels is a few years down the road. The plan is for the barriers to be in place at Ramstadsletta in 2026/27. The barriers will have a curvature favourable for exposing the solar panels to the sun and cover an area between 250-300m² on the south side of the road, just before the planned Ramstadsletta Bridge. With today's technology, this gives a power production of at least 50kW.

Some attempts have previously been made to use solar cells for tunnel lighting in smaller single-pass tunnels. But the E18 West Corridor is the first to test it on a highly traffic road.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Noise and crash barriers, high strength protection
    April 4, 2012
    HOLGATE INFRASTRUCTURE & Motorway Services has supplied vehicle restraint systems and noise attenuation panels to major highway upgrade projects in the UK. The firm has installed Vetex crash barriers and high performance aluminium noise barriers on the M50 Linton upgrade for Alu Griffiths and Amey. Holgate has also supplied the noise barrier package on the M74 Glasgow motorway extension.
  • Norwegian bridge faces questions
    October 16, 2019
    The cost of the planned bridge connecting Sotra Island to mainland Norway may be considerably higher than originally anticipated. The project could cost as much as €1.78 billion to carry out, which includes building the necessary road links and tunnel sections. With the concession for the bridge being planned as a 20-year package, there is concern that this will not be a viable deal for Norwegian firms. Construction is intended to be complete by 2026. A number of international firms have expressed an intere
  • Superlative formwork’s global appeal
    April 25, 2013
    The latest formwork solutions are enabling some tough bridge-building projects to be delivered in South America and Europe, while the world’s largest construction equipment show is seeing the merits of other cutting-edge formwork. Guy Woodford reports. Taking a road and rail link across one of South America’s largest rivers, together with its swamps and floodplain, calls for a new crossing of superlative dimensions. Two 135.5m pylons for the third bridge across the Orinoco River in Venezuela are taking shap
  • Sao Paulo’s Mario Covas ring road faces last section glitch
    April 10, 2015
    A consortium of Brazil's Mendes Junior and Spain's Isolux Corsán could lose its US$208 million contract to build part of the northern section of the Mario Covas beltway around the Brazilian city of São Paulo. The consortium, led by Mendes Junior, is falling behind schedule because of cash flow problems, according to São Paulo state highway company Dersa. The deal was signed in January 2013, local paper Folha de São Paulo reported.