Skip to main content

Consortium Via al Puerto to finish Colombia’s Buga-Buevantura road

Colombia’s National Infrastructure Agency (ANI) has approved Consorcio Estructura Plural Via al Puerto to build the remaining 26.5km of the Buga-Buenaventura dual carriageway. Construction costs will be just under US$358 million with another $645 million likely needed to maintain and operate the public-private partnership road for 30 years. Works include construction of two tunnels, 12 bridges, 7.5km of cycle lanes, as well as maintenance of 111km of the main road, according to a report by El Pais new
May 24, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Colombia’s National Infrastructure Agency (ANI) has approved Consorcio Estructura Plural Via al Puerto to build the remaining 26.5km of the Buga-Buenaventura dual carriageway.

Construction costs will be just under US$358 million with another $645 million likely needed to maintain and operate the public-private partnership road for 30 years.

Works include construction of two tunnels, 12 bridges, 7.5km of cycle lanes, as well as maintenance of 111km of the main road, according to a report by El Pais newspaper.

The consortium consists of three partners: 34% held by Carlos Alberto Solarte Solarte and 33% each held by Conconcreto and CSS Constructores.

Buenaventuyra, with a population of around 335,000, is Colombia’s main Pacific coast port. The highway forms part of the Bogotá-Buenaventura corridor, which transports more than 40% of the country's cargo to be exported by way of the Pacific Ocean.

Meanwhile, president of Colombia's national development bank Financiera de Desarrollo Nacional, Clemente del Valle, said that the financing of eight projects in the first wave of Colombia’s 4G road strategy should be finalised by August. Del Valle said that 17 financial institutions, including five banks as well local and international monetary funds, are willing to support 4G roads.

The second wave of project is likely to need more funding than the first and he government will put the proceeds from the sale of government stock in the energy firm Isagen towards second wave projects.

However, the director of Colombia’s National Planning Department, Simon Gaviria, warned that more work focus needs to be applied to secure timely private sector funding for 4G projects, according to a report by El Espectador newspaper. He said that $10.03 billion is needed for the first wave, but so far only one project has secured the necessary capital.

Related Content

  • COWI wins Massey Tunnel design contract
    February 18, 2022
    COWI will develop an eight-lane immersed tunnel for the George Massey Crossing Project near Vancouver, Canada.
  • Fast-track Biloxi Bay bridge
    July 18, 2012
    Construction of a bridge destroyed in a hurricane was completed early, and with some added aesthetic benefits Hurricane Katrina, one of the deadliest and costliest natural disasters in US history, made landfall on 29 August, 2005, devastating the Gulf Coast. The US 90 Bridge over Biloxi Bay (connecting the communities of Biloxi and Ocean Springs, Mississippi) was one of many major highway and railroad bridges knocked out of service due to extensive storm damage. The eye of the storm passed 96km west of Bilo
  • Colombian road projects recommencing
    May 18, 2020
    Colombia is restarting road construction works on key links.
  • VIDEO: Even the police can make driving errors
    September 16, 2015
    The very people who urge drivers to use more caution are not immune to driving errors themselves, as the video here shows. Speed is sometimes involved and so is simply lack of due care. A speeding police car with its lights flashing and horns blaring may have the right of way, in law or by courtesy, but in many cases the police driver should take note of dangerous situations. At times police drivers also can make a simply mistake, as recently happened in the Spanish Mediterranean city of Barcelona. A