Skip to main content

Italy: Astaldi takes out loan for Turkish motorway project

Italian civil engineering group Astaldi has underwritten a €4.5 billion (US$5 billion) loan towards the Turkish motorway project of Gebze-Orhangazi-Izmir, which is worth an overall €5.65 billion ($6.4 billion). According to the La Repubblica newspaper, the loan facility will be used to complete the 301km last stretch of the motorway and link the city of Bursa, south of the Sea of Marmara, and the Aegean port of Izmir. Part of the loan will be used to refinance stretches that are under construction for
June 18, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Italian civil engineering group 1324 Astaldi has underwritten a €4.5 billion (US$5 billion) loan towards the Turkish motorway project of Gebze-Orhangazi-Izmir, which is worth an overall €5.65 billion ($6.4 billion).

According to the La Repubblica newspaper, the loan facility will be used to complete the 301km last stretch of the motorway and link the city of Bursa, south of the Sea of Marmara, and the Aegean port of Izmir.

Part of the loan will be used to refinance stretches that are under construction for the Gebze-Orhangazi-Bursa link.

The pool of Turkish creditor banks include Akbank, Garanti Bankasi and Yapi Kredi.

The overall project includes a 3.3km Izmit Bay suspension bridge and will be, when finished, a 377km six-lane motorway with 44km of access roads. The project was started in October 2010 and is set to be completed by 2018. It will shorten the distance between Gebze and Izmir by more than 140km.

Also being built are 30 viaducts totalling 18.21km, four tunnels totalling 7.4km and more than 200 bridges.

The project also includes 18 toll collection centres, five maintenance and operation centres, seven service areas and seven park areas.

The project’s first phase is the 53km Gebze-Orhangazi section, for which an engineering procurement and construction (EPC) contract worth nearly €4.67 billion was awarded to the joint venture NOMAYG in late 2011. The Izmit Bay suspension bridge is within this section.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bay of Plenty turns costly
    July 25, 2022
    New Zealand’s Bay of Plenty highway projects have nearly doubled in cost.
  • Nepal road upgrades being planned
    November 28, 2016
    A series of infrastructure upgrades are planned for Nepal that will help improve its economic development. A key infrastructure requirement for Nepal is the development of its road network. In a move to tackle the issue, Nepal’s Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport has initiated the strategy for the development of roads in all 75 districts by 2022. About US$7.5 billion has been estimated as being required for the completion of this project. Funding will require financing from internal sources
  • Bolivian project moving forward
    February 24, 2012
    Bolivia's 306km Villa Tunari-San Ignacio de Moxos road is due for completion in 2014. The new road will provide and important link for the departments of Beni and Cochabamba
  • Volvo CE ‘routes’ for Chicago highway project
    May 22, 2014
    More than 2.5 million m³ of material is being moved with a fleet of Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE) articulated haulers in the US state of Illinois. Home to the world’s first skyscraper, the Chicago Bears – and the Blues Brothers – Illinois is the fifth most populous American state and a major transport hub. Industrial cities and agricultural productivity is growing in central and northern Illinois – while natural resources like coal, timber and oil and gas in the south help provide the state with