Skip to main content

Major German road contract awarded

A major road contract has been awarded close to Hesse in Germany.
By MJ Woof September 2, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
STRABAG is one of the partners in a major project in Hesse, Germany – image © courtesy of STRABAG

The contract for a major road project in Germany has been awarded for the A49 highway. The work will be carried out under the PPP model and is located close to Hesse.

The project is a design-build-finance-operate-maintain contract for A49 highway between Fritzlar and Ohmtal interchange. This 62km deal will be handled jointly by STRABAG Großprojekte and LEONHARD WEISS to close the gap between Schwalmstadt and the Ohmtal interchange

The project has a value of over € 700 million. The deal is for the construction of a 31km long section of the A49 highway between Schwalmstadt and the Ohmtal interchange in northern and central Hesse. The PPP project also includes the design and proportionate financing as well as the maintenance and operation of the motorway over a distance of nearly 62km between the Fritzlar junction and the Ohmtal A5/A49 interchange.

The client is the Federal Republic of Germany, represented by the State of Hesse, represented by Deutsche Einheit Fernstraßenplanungs- und -bau (DEGES). The consortium A 49 Autobahngesellschaft has been established for the project and is held 50:50 between STRABAG Infrastrukturprojekt and Meridiam Investments SAS. The PPP contract is for a 30-year concession.

Financing has been provided by the KfW IPEX-Bank (Germany), the European Investment Bank (EIB), MEAG (Germany) and ČSOB (Czech Republic, part of the Belgian KBC Group). In all the project will cost around €1.3 billion.

“We are pleased about the renewed trust in our ability to successfully realise large infrastructure projects in public-private partnerships, something we are already demonstrating in Germany with the A8 and A5 motorways,” said Thomas Birtel, CEO of STRABAG.

The A49 between Fritzlar and the Ohmtal interchange is divided into four sections. The first section to the Neuental junction is already open to traffic. The second section to the Schwalmstadt junction is currently under construction by HessenMobil. Realisation of the new sections three and four, from Schwalmstadt over the Stadtallendorf-Nord junction to the Ohmtal interchange, should begin in September 2020. The contract includes upgrading the A5 along a 1.5km section at the Ohmtal intersection. The main construction works are scheduled for completion in the third quarter of 2024.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ASECAP: Cooperation needed for better toll-road risk management
    May 31, 2017
    Toll operators must offer a level of service for which drivers are prepared to pay because in many cases, drivers have alternative free-use routes. Incentives to attract drivers onto toll roads must include shorter and reliable journey times as well smooth and trouble free travel – all at an affordable price. Private companies running toll roads face the same difficulties as any other commercial entity, in particular financing construction before any toll revenue can be collected. Hardly surprising that fin
  • FCC heads group that will build Toyo Tunnel in Colombia
    November 6, 2015
    Spanish environmental services, infrastructure and water group FCC has secured a €392 deal to design, build, operate and maintain the 10km Toyo Tunnel in Urabá Port, Colombia. The Government of Antioquia awarded the project to the consortium in which Madrid-based FCC has a 40% share and a group of local business people hold 60%. The tunnel is around 80km from Medellin, the capital of Colombia’s mountainous Antioquia province. The US$426 million contract is for 10 years, during which design and constru
  • Delays on Slovakian projects
    July 9, 2012
    Work on several new highways being built in Slovakia as public-private partnerships (PPPs) will be delayed by six to 12 months. This means that the first sections of the Martin-Presov link will not open before 2011. The last section is expected to be completed in either late 2012 or early 2013.
  • PPPs for Road Development - IRF Accredited to Deliver PPP Training Globally
    October 11, 2017
    With this accreditation, professionals taking the APMG-approved IRF course on PPPs may go on to apply for a Public-Private Partnerships Professional Certification (CP3P) established by APMG, a global examination institute. The CP3P program, whose aim is to enhance PPP performance globally, is recognised by leading institutions. These include the World Bank Group, the Asian Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the Islamic Development