Skip to main content

Another bridge over the River Drina

Cost of the two-lane bridge between Bosnia and Serbia is reportedly around €13 million.
By David Arminas October 29, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
March opening likely for Bratoljub Bridge (photo courtesy of newspaper Nezavisne Novine)

The Bratoljub Bridge between Serbia and the autonomous Bosnian entity of Republika Srpska is set to open in March after years of delays.

Local media reported that Radovan Viskovic, prime minister of the Republika Srpska, announced the date.

News reports in mid-2016 said Serbia’s ministry of construction announced that the bridge was soon to be completed, at a cost of around €13 million. Serbia reportedly was building the entire two-lane 227m-long bridge that will also have a cycle and pedestrian lane on each side.

The bridge connects the Serbian town of Ljubovija and the town of Bratunac in Republika Srpska on the Bosnian side of the River Drina.

The process for agreeing a new bridge over the Drina  began in 2013 and was formalised in 2016 for construction to start soon after. Although the bridge was mostly built, the project stalled over construction of the connecting roads on each side of the structure.

On the Bosnian side, the government of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina was to build the border crossing within the municipality of Bratunac in Republika Srpska, a constituent part of federated Bosnia and Herzegovina. Meanwhile, the government of  Republika Srpska was to build the access road to the bridge.

Disagreements between the Bosnian government and that of Republika Srpska delayed construction work.

Media reported that the contractor has been MBA-Ratko Mitrović Civil Engineering, based in the Serbian capital Belgrade, and the project was led by the Traffic Institute CIP Belgrade, also in Belgrade.

Related Content

  • Serbia-Kosovo highway work starting
    October 12, 2021
    Work is finally starting on the Serbia-Kosovo highway project.
  • Emergent markets key for formwork sector growth
    May 21, 2014
    Central and south-east Europe are hotbeds for new highway infrastructure projects utilising cutting-edge formwork solutions, while a number of leading formwork manufacturers are also looking at emergent markets for growth. Guy Woodford reports Travelling between Hungary’s capital Budapest and Southern Dalmatia now takes less time thanks to the Pan-European Corridor Vc – European route 73. Numerous tunnels and bridges are erected along the 397km stretch of the European route 73 through Bosnia owing to the
  • Serbia: end in sight for finishing southern part of Corridor 10
    August 26, 2016
    Serbia’s minister of construction and infrastructure, Zorana Mihajlovic, said that the southern part of the Corridor 10 motorway is expected to be completed by the end of 2017. Speaking to the Beta news agency, she also said that work on the Corridor 11 motorway, on the Ub-Lajkovac section, is being carried out in cooperation with Chinese partner company Shang Dong. The government has also signed an agreement for construction of the Surcin-Obrenovac part of the Corridor 11. Ongoing talks between Serbi
  • Graham Infrastructure wins Nisutlin Bridge
    July 13, 2022
    The new bridge in the Yukon will be the largest capital project in in the northern Canadian territory’s history.