Skip to main content

Croatia’s Peljesac Bridge progressing

China Road and Bridge Corporation is working through the pandemic period.
By David Arminas June 11, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
CRBC started construction in the Bay of Mali Ston in January 2019 (photo courtesy of Hrvatske ceste/Croatian Roads Authority)

The first pier for Croatia’s Peljesac Bridge is rising above the waterline of the Bay of Mali Ston, according to reports by Croatian media.

The bridge is being built by China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC), part of the Chinese state-owned China Communications Construction Company.  CCCC was formed through the merger of CRBC and China Harbour Engineering in 2005.

CRBC started construction in the bay in January 2019. The contract, a US$340m project, is the first time that a Chinese company had won a bid for a project funded by the European Union. It is also part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative to fund and construct major infrastructure between China through Asia to the Middle East, Africa and Europe.

Strabag, which bid for the project, was chosen for only the access roads to the bridge and cited unfair competition by a state funded company. The major issue was CRBC’s bid being around 20% cheaper than Strabag’s bid. A legal challenge to have the contract overturned was unsuccessful.

Croatian media recently reported that prime minister Andrej Plenkovic, the minister of transport and other cabinet members visited the construction site. Plenkovic praised the workers and companies for using safe working methods during the ongoing pandemic.

Around 80% of the cost will be co-financed by the European Commission’s body for large infrastructure projects, JASPERS - Joint Assistance to Support Projects in European Regions.

According to construction plans accepted in 2007, the project is for a 21m-wide cable-stayed bridge carrying four lanes across the entrance to Mali Ston Bay. The main span would be 568m and likely be the second largest in Europe. The two main pylons would reach 170m above sea level.

The project also calls for access roads at both sides of the bridge. Work would include two tunnels on Pelješac island - one nearly 2.2km long and the other at 450m - as well as two smaller bridges on Pelješac, one 500m long and the other only 50m.

Once completed, this bridge would physically link Peljesac to mainland Croatia, which is now interrupted by a strip of land belonging to Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Start of construction had been continuously delayed until shipping rights and boundaries were better defined between the two countries.

There had been concerns by Bosnia about possible obstruction of cargo ships bound into the bay for the Bosnian city of Neum. The Bosnian government is planning to upgrade the infrastructure of Neum, the only Adriatic Sea access for Bosnia along its brief 20km of coastline.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tunnel contract for Bosnian highway
    December 17, 2012
    Turkish company Cengiz Insaat has reportedly been awarded the €115 million contract for the construction of the Suhodol-Tarcin motorway in Bosnia. The works, which will be done in cooperation with Bosnian company Euroasfalt, will include two tunnels. One of them will be 400m long, while the other will be 2.5km. Works are expected to be completed by 2014. Meanwhile, bids are now being offered for a major highway project in Bosnia. This follows the opening of the tender process for the project by Bosnian high
  • Companies line up for Norway’s Rogfast project at Kvitsøy
    November 27, 2018
    Five companies have expressed an interest in the technically challenging €315 million Kvitsøy section of Norway’s major road and tunnel project Rogfast.
  • Increasing importance of alternate truck routes
    February 14, 2012
    The fabled Silk Route from China to Europe takes many forms, and is again becoming increasingly important as Patrick Smithreports The ancient Silk Road was never a single caravan route, but covered hundreds of kilometres in width extending in length for around 10,000km. This is the view of the European International Road Transport Union (IRU), and many other countries and organisations, who point out that it is a system of routes covering many countries via a series of branch roads that dates back some 2
  • Fluor and ACS Infrastructure Canada win Gordie Howe Bridge deal
    October 2, 2018
    Bridging North America will build the Gordie Howe Bridge, named after a famous Canadian ice hockey player and leading scorer A partnership including Fluor Canada and ACS Infrastructure Canada has been chosen to design, build, finance, operate and maintain the Gordie Howe International Bridge project. The client, Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority (WDBA), announced the appointment of Bridging North America group in the Canadian city of Windsor, across the Detroit River from Detroit in the US state of Michig