Skip to main content

Volvo moves mountains in Portugal

Volvo Construction Equipment is opening up the remote Portuguese regions of Duoro and Trás-os-Montes for development through one of the largest road tunnels in the Iberian Penninsula. The Túnel do Marão project takes in Portugal’s sixth largest mountain, the Serra do Marão. At a height of 1,415m above sea level, it presents a major obstacle between the country’s second city Porto, located on the coast, and Vila Real near the Spanish border, even since the construction of the winding IP4 highway, built in t
June 8, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
7659 Volvo Construction Equipment is opening up the remote Portuguese regions of Duoro and Trás-os-Montes for development through one of the largest road tunnels in the Iberian Penninsula.

The Túnel do Marão project takes in Portugal’s sixth largest mountain, the Serra do Marão. At a height of 1,415m above sea level, it presents a major obstacle between the country’s second city Porto, located on the coast, and Vila Real near the Spanish border, even since the construction of the winding IP4 highway, built in the late 1970s, which is treacherous, especially in winter.

The new project is to extend the A4 motorway from Porto from where it now stops at Amarante to Vila Real but it will go straight through the mountain and include the twin parallel tunnel Túnel do Marão running nearly 6km east to west.

It will be the largest road tunnel in Portugal and one of the largest on the peninsula. Working on the project is underground construction specialist EPOS - Empresa Portuguesa de Obras Subterrâneas - which is already behind some of the most important road and rail tunnels in Portugal, Spain and Algeria.

EPOS began work on the twin tunnels in October 2014 and plans to finish concreting and paving stages by February 2016. EPOS is still on the excavation stage and has excavated around 35% of the tunnel’s length using 22 pieces of Volvo construction equipment, of which 13 were purchased shortly before the project began.

Part of a larger 71-strong fleet, provided and serviced by independent dealer Ascendum Portugal, EPOS’s Túnel do Marão contingent includes four Volvo EW140D wheeled excavators, four L220H wheeled loaders and 14 A40G articulated haulers.
“On a project like this, where work continues around the clock, 30 days a month, 100% machine availability is one of our biggest requirements. We cannot risk delay due to unscheduled downtime,” said Dias de Carvalho, EPOS’s general manager of 20 years.

“I have relied on Volvo Construction Equipment for decades and the quality of the machines, their ease of maintenance and the service provided by Ascendum Portugal has never let me down.”

Related Content

  • Volvo's training in operation
    July 10, 2012
    Volvo Construction Equipment is offering machine simulators that are said to provide a valuable training resource for wheel loader, articulated hauler and excavator operators of all skill levels. The firm also has a new twin seat cab designed to help train grader operators. The sophisticated simulators feature advanced 3D-graphics and use the same controls that are fitted to Volvo machines. Operators sit in the simulator cab and are set to work on various tasks on a plasma projection screen in front of them
  • Norway's bridge meets tough environmental targets
    May 2, 2012
    One of the world's longest bridges is being built in Norway – for traffic volumes of just 2,000 cars/day reports Adrian Greeman. The stunning landscape of the long sea fjords in Norway is one of its glories, attracting thousands of tourists every summer. But the high mountains and deep sea inlets are also one of the great obstacles to transport and development.
  • Norway's bridge meets tough environmental targets
    February 27, 2012
    One of the world's longest bridges is being built in Norway – for traffic volumes of just 2,000 cars/day reports Adrian Greeman. The stunning landscape of the long sea fjords in Norway is one of its glories, attracting thousands of tourists every summer. But the high mountains and deep sea inlets are also one of the great obstacles to transport and development.
  • PPP for Danish highway
    February 7, 2012
    Construction of the first public-private (PPP) funded highway in Denmark will see a new road in the south of the country near the German border. The Kliplev Motorway Group (KMG) is one half of Denmark's first ever PPP with the government, after winning the tender to build the highway. KMG is financing the whole project and the deal includes construction and ongoing maintenance when it is complete. KMG is the concessionary company for the project and is 100% owned by the Austrian company STRABAG, Europe's la