Skip to main content

Switzerland to invest €821.07mn more on congestion reduction

A further €821.07 million (CHF 1 billion) is to be spent on reducing traffic problems on Swiss roads, including the A4. The FORTA fund should be used to finance the expansion of the motorways between Meyrin and Vernier-Le Vengeron, Luterbach and Harkingen and Andelfingen and Winterthour. A further €32.83 million should be spent on work around Crissier, which already benefited from €98.51 million of the €1.14 billion allotted in the first phase of traffic jam reduction. The second €816.85 million phase is to
June 17, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
A further €821.07 million (CHF 1 billion) is to be spent on reducing traffic problems on Swiss roads, including the A4. The FORTA fund should be used to finance the expansion of the motorways between Meyrin and Vernier-Le Vengeron, Luterbach and Harkingen and Andelfingen and Winterthour. A further €32.83 million should be spent on work around Crissier, which already benefited from €98.51 million of the €1.14 billion allotted in the first phase of traffic jam reduction. The second €816.85 million phase is to be reviewed by the Council of States. The liberal greens have called for more spending on public transport and a mobility pricing strategy. Around €41.04 million has been reserved for the Geneva Airport-Le Vengeron road. The total costs of works could reach €4.51 billion. A further list of sites to use up the remaining €2.62 billion of funds has also been produced.

Meanwhile, Swiss pedestrian association Fussverkehr Schweiz has called for the state to give pedestrians higher priority in road construction projects. This includes aiming to lower traffic through lower speed limits or the construction of islands in the middle of pedestrian crossings. Routes used by children to get to school should be renovated, according to the association, as some 400 children are injured on their way to school each year, of which 80 sustain serious injuries and an average of two children die each year while walking to school.

Related Content

  • Safety for Sri Lanka
    April 19, 2012
    Sri Lanka is struggling to deal with a road safety problem that is crippling and killing large numbers of its citizens. In the past three decades over 40,000 people have been killed and 68,440 seriously injured in 1,120,848 road mishaps in Sri Lanka according to official reports. Unreported accidents mean that the actual figures may be far higher however. Young people face particular safety problems in the country and in 2011 225 schoolchildren were killed in road accidents while 4,100 others critically inj
  • New road tunnels are planned for Switzerland
    July 24, 2012
    Two key tunnel projects are being planned in Switzerland at present, for projects at Jura and Gothard. The Swiss Federal Department for Infrastructure Uvek now intends to build a third tunnel at Jura Mountain by 2022. This will be the third link for Motorway 2 and will be completed before renovation work is carried out on the two existing tunnels. The new link will provide four lanes and ensure traffic flow continues while the existing links are improved. The construction of the third tunnel is expected to
  • The cost of crashes in the US
    May 25, 2023
    The financial cost of road crashes in the US places a heavy burden
  • 50% drop in road accident fatalities in Spain between 2001 and 2010
    April 24, 2012
    The number of fatalities in traffic accidents in Spain has dropped by more than 50 per cent between 2001 and 2010 from 5,517 to 2,478. In total, the ten years saw 41,665 people lose their lives on Spanish roads while 205,774 were seriously injured.Stop Accidentes, a road safety association, has asked the new government to maintain a total commitment to keeping road safety a priority and to complete the Strategic Road Safety Plan 2011-2020 which had been on the previous government's agenda.