Skip to main content

Ecuador's new connection

A new bridge in Ecuador will improve transport connections in the country.
February 29, 2012 Read time: 1 min
A new bridge in Ecuador will improve transport connections in the country. The opening of this new structure is of note as it is the longest bridge in Ecuador. The Bahia de Caraquez-San Vicente road bridge cost some US$102 million to construct.

Related Content

  • Colombia’s new transport infrastructure to boost national construction industry
    July 30, 2013
    Huge investment in Colombia’s transport infrastructure is expected to lead to substantial market growth in the country’s construction industry, according to new research by Timetric. In its research report; ‘Construction in Colombia – Key Trends and Opportunities to 2017’, Timetric, who provide online data, analysis and advisory services to key financial and industry sectors, states, “Colombia’s Ministry of Transportation plans to invest COP102.3 trillion (US$56 billion) in transport infrastructure developm
  • New Zambezi River bridge to link Botswana and Zambia
    August 13, 2015
    Work is now underway on the new Zambezi River crossing, which will improve transport links between Botswana and Zambia. The new bridge crosses the river close to the Zambian town of Kazungula and is costing some US$259.3 million to construct. The bridge will be 923m long and will carry both rail and road traffic, with border posts located at either end. The project is being carried out by South Korean contractor Daewoo Engineering and Construction. Financing for the project is being provided by the African
  • New Zealand announces massive infrastructure development programme
    January 30, 2020
    New Zealand’s massive infrastructure development programme has a key focus on transport improvements.
  • I Lift NY crane places first girder on New York’s Tappan Zee Bridge
    June 25, 2015
    One of the world’s largest cranes has placed the first steel girder assembly for the approach span of the new NY Bridge, often called the Tappen Zee Bridge in New York. The barge-mounted I Lift NY super crane with its nearly 100m boom slowly picked up the 125m unit from its delivery barge and gently lowered it onto concrete pedestals in the Hudson River, near the Rockland County side of the bridge. The super crane will install even larger sections of the new bridge, some of which weigh around 907tonne