Skip to main content

Polish capital route project being planned

Route reviews are being carried out for a key Polish project. Poland’s highways authority, GDDKiA, is analysing the four potential routes for the S10 road, which will connect with Warsaw’s outer ring road, itself still to be completed. The different routes have estimated costs ranging from €5.34 billion to €5.99 billion and all connect with the A1, though at different intersections. Financing for the work should be secured by 2020, with tendering expected in 2025 and construction due to commence in 2026.
September 9, 2019 Read time: 1 min

Route reviews are being carried out for a key Polish project. Poland’s highways authority, 1361 GDDKiA, is analysing the four potential routes for the S10 road, which will connect with Warsaw’s outer ring road, itself still to be completed. The different routes have estimated costs ranging from €5.34 billion to €5.99 billion and all connect with the A1, though at different intersections. Financing for the work should be secured by 2020, with tendering expected in 2025 and construction due to commence in 2026.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New Morocco motorway stretches being planned
    January 21, 2020
    Morocco will benefit from new motorway stretches, cutting congestion around key cities.
  • Polish highways busy
    March 6, 2012
    Poland has invested some €5.15 billion on road projects in 2010. The Polish General Directorate for National Roads and Motorways (GDDKiA) signed contracts to build 544km of roads, including 300km of highways and 244km of dual carriageways. Of this 15% came from the Polish Government, while some 85% came from the National Road Fund (KFD).
  • Vietnam’s North-South Expressway sections
    March 24, 2025
    Key sections of Vietnam’s North-South Expressway are nearly complete.
  • Poland announces €534 million Bridges for Regions programme
    May 30, 2018
    A bridge on the San River near Jarosław will be the first of 22 to be constructed under the Polish government’s Bridges for Regions programme. Central government will fund around 80% or the programme that is expected to cost about €534 million, said Mateusz Morawiecki, the prime minister. The rest will be contributed by local governments, with some of the money coming from a local roads fund to be set up in the autumn. The fund will also provide financing for the modernisation of existing bridge crossings,