Skip to main content

Pan Borneo Highway construction contracts clinched

Lebuhraya Borneo Utara, the project delivery partner for Malaysia’s Pan Borneo Highway project, has awarded a US$317.5 million contract to a joint venture of local Sarawak state firms. The 70:30 partnership of KKB and WCT will rehabilitate and upgrade the Sungai Arip Bridge-Bintulu Airport Junction section of the highway. Piling works, earthworks, geotechnical, drainage, roads, pavings, as well as demolition and site clearance are all part of the contract, said WCT. Work is expected to take four years an
August 1, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Lebuhraya Borneo Utara, the project delivery partner for Malaysia’s Pan Borneo Highway project, has awarded a US$317.5 million contract to a joint venture of local Sarawak state firms.

The 70:30 partnership of KKB and WCT will rehabilitate and upgrade the Sungai Arip Bridge-Bintulu Airport Junction section of the highway. Piling works, earthworks, geotechnical, drainage, roads, pavings, as well as demolition and site clearance are all part of the contract, said WCT.

Work is expected to take four years and three months – 51 months.

Construction of a 43km stretch from the Nyabau to Bakun junctions, the Sarawak port city of Bintulu in March last year. When completed in 2022, it will cover 1,089 km on the island of Borneo, across the Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak. It will run from Telok Melano to Merapok.

Estimates for the completed highway have been around $7.14 billion. Included in the project is road works through the small coastal independent kingdom of Brunei, which is surrounded by Malaysian territory. The southern part of Borneo island belongs to Indonesia.

According to the website of Lebuhraya Borneo Utara, Sarawak’s major trunk road system today is the Federal Route 1, part of the Pan Borneo Highway or Trans Borneo Highway. It is mainly a two-lane single carriageway. Only 144km - 13% - of the trunk road from Sematan to Lawas is a four-lane dual carriageway. Travel across the vast state of Sarawak continues to be a long journey – up to 19 hours from Sematan to Miri.

Related Content

  • Going Digital helped the Government of Malaysia leverage digital twins to deliver trusted information for better project and asset management.
    March 30, 2020
    In 2014, the government of Malaysia announced a plan to fully develop and upgrade the two-lane trunk road across Malaysia’s largest state, Sarawak, to accelerate socioeconomic growth in East Malaysia.
  • Pan-Borneo highway upgrade in discussion
    June 6, 2013
    Plans are being worked on for an upgrade to the 2,083km Pan—Borneo highway. The Malaysian Government is discussing options with regard to the highway, which connects Sarawak's Sematan, with Brunei and Sabah's Serudung. The work is expected to require five years to be carried out and would also include constructing link roads. The project is expected to cost in the order of US$3.23 billion and Malaysian contractor Naim Holdings is amongst the leading bidders for the work. The highway project forms part of an
  • Major Malaysian bridge project planned
    February 3, 2016
    Malaysia’s Federal Government and Sarawak State Government have agreed to construct a bridge in Sri Aman. The new bridge will span the Sungai Batang Lupar waterway in Sri Aman. The work will be managed and funded on a 50-50 basis by Malaysia’s Federal Government and the Sarawak State Government. In addition, construction work on the Pan-Borneo Highway is now underway. This major project is expected to cost around US$3.95 billion and will improve transport between Malaysia and its neighbours, helping boost e
  • Malaysia highway deal planned
    January 13, 2021
    Construction work is planned for a key Malaysia highway connection.