Skip to main content

Egypt’s new concrete highway connecting Cairo with Sues

CEMEX has played a key role in a highway construction job in Egypt. The company has supplied 130,000m3 of concrete that has been used for the construction of the new Cairo–Suez highway project. The project is of note as this is Egypt’s first concrete highway and if it proves successful, more are likely to be built using this construction method. The 35km road is of major importance to Egypt also as it connects the capital, Cairo, with the seaport city of Suez, two of the nation’s most important economic cen
July 15, 2016 Read time: 1 min


Related Content

  • New highway projects in China
    April 28, 2023
    New highway projects are now underway in China.
  • A major coal mine project in Indonesia will be connected with a new road link
    April 16, 2012
    A new road link will be constructed in Indonesia to connect a coal mine development. The 100km road forms part of a US$764 million development for the coal project, with the link being constructed by Citra Marga Nusaphala Persada, an Indonesian toll road operator in South Sumatra, Indonesia. Work on the road will commence in either the second half of 2012 or the first half of 2013. According to Operational Director of the firm, Hudaya Arryanto, the road is for supporting the coal mining industry, which is n
  • Concrete in the Philippines
    October 17, 2022
    The booming construction sector in the Philippines is said to be fuelling strong demand for concrete batching plants
  • Electro-fragmentation offers new recycling solution for fibre-reinforced concrete
    July 12, 2018
    A pan-European research project is investigating the use of electro-fragmentation to help recycle fibre-reinforced concrete (FRC). Increasingly used in civil applications such as tunnels and bridge decks, FRC can be challenging to recycle because of the difficulty in separating the tiny fibres from the concrete material. “Most of the research into FRC is about the formulation or the application of the material,” said Kathy Bru, a process engineer at research organisation BRGM. “We are looking ahead 20 or 3