Skip to main content

JP Autoceste eyes 2020 as completion date for Bosnia’s Corridor 5c

Around two-thirds of the Corridor 5c motorway project is expected to be completed by 2020, according to the director of the Bosnian motorways company JP Autoceste. Jasmin Buco said that 120km out of 337km of the motorway are complete. The corridor section, to connect Budapest with Ploce port in Croatia, is taking the most time. He said that the cost of the remaining part of the motorway is expected to be around €2.81 billion.
March 3, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Around two-thirds of the Corridor 5c motorway project is expected to be completed by 2020, according to the director of the Bosnian motorways company JP Autoceste.

Jasmin Buco said that 120km out of 337km of the motorway are complete.

The corridor section, to connect Budapest with Ploce port in Croatia, is taking the most time.

He said that the cost of the remaining part of the motorway is expected to be around €2.81 billion.

Buco said he expects that among new projects to start this year will be the Pocitelj-Zvirovici and Buna-POcitelj roads, worth around €130 million, and the two parts of the Zenicka ringroad.

Corridor Vc, or 5c, is designed to connect Kiev in the Ukraine to Slovakia and Hungary and run through Bosnia to Croatia’s Adriatic coast. The pan-European corridor consists of three branches, of which Vc follows a route from Budapest in Hungary to Ploce on the Croatian coast.

The longest stretch of Vc lies in Bosnia and Herzegovina, covering 337km.

In mid-2014, a 6km stretch of the highway between Sarajevo and Zenica was opened that included a 3km-loong tunnel. The March 1 tunnel, named after date of Bosnia's independence referendum, meant that the journey between the two cities was cut from one hour to 30 minutes.

The tunnel cost around €62 million had been under construction for several years, first by two Slovenian companies that eventually which went bankrupt, and later by a consortium of Bosnian companies, according to a report by Balkan Insight at the time. The tunnel is the longest in Bosnia and is one of the most important infrastructure projects to be completed since the 1992-5 war

Related Content

  • Euro-asfalt picks up Hranjen Tunnel deal
    August 15, 2022
    Bosnia’s Hranjen Tunnel is part of the Prača-Goražda expressway.
  • Bosnian highway investment
    April 27, 2012
    Bosnia's highway company Autoceste Federacije BiH will invest ?500 million in the construction of the Corridor Vc road. The European Investment Bank (EIB) will provide a loan of ?166 million to part finance the project.
  • Bosnia-Croatia link discussed
    July 13, 2012
    Bosnia and Croatia are looking to discuss a new highway construction project to link the two countries. The Adriatic-Ionic section of the Corridor VC motorway looks likely to pass through Bosnia. The plan is to build a total of 110km of roads, out of the planned 336km on the Corridor VC, by 2012.
  • Croatia: Peljeski Bridge decision in summer 2017
    November 21, 2016
    Croatia’s minister of infrastructure, Oleg Butkovic, said a winner will be chosen to build the controversial Peljeski Bridge on the Adriatic Sea coast by summer 2017. The project, valued at around €370 million, will be carried out in three phases. In June, a tender was started by the national roads company Hrvatske Ceste but was halted last month over complaints by some bidders about pre-qualification issues. The State Commission for Control of Public Ordering recently rejected the pre-qualificatio