Skip to main content

Work to start on section of Bulgaria’s controversial Struma road

Work will start next month on a 24km section of Bulgaria’s controversial Struma Highway, part of the the Pan-European Corridor IV. Corridor IV runs from Dresden in Germany to Istanbul in western Turkey. The route, named after the Struma River, is part of Е79 that runs from Miskolc in Hungary to the Greek Aegean port of Thessaloniki, passing through the Romanian cities of Deva and Craiova. The 156km route has been under construction in four sections, with work on the third and final section now abou
August 19, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Work will start next month on a 24km section of Bulgaria’s controversial Struma Highway, part of the the Pan-European Corridor IV.

Corridor IV runs from Dresden in Germany to Istanbul in western Turkey.

The route, named after the Struma River, is part of Е79 that runs from Miskolc in Hungary to the Greek Aegean port of Thessaloniki, passing through the Romanian cities of Deva and Craiova.

The 156km route has been under construction in four sections, with work on the third and final section now about to begin. The segment will cost €144 million to build and will run between Kresna and Sandanski.

News agency Novinite reported that work is due to begin in June next year on another section as well, a 13km segment between Blagoevgrad and Krupnik.

At the heart of the controversy for the Bulgarian government is a 20km stretch in the Kresna valley. Ecologists and animals rights groups claim the area as crucial for migratory birds as well as being home to bears, wolves and jackals. The valley with its warm micro-climate connects the southern fringe of the Balkans with the northern tip of the Mediterranean.

The government, in turn, claims the route is vital for increasing tourism and trade and has arranged more than €670 million of European Union grants for construction works.

Villages and other local people also see the highway as an escape route for the area’s young people who will leave for work elsewhere.

Related Content

  • Increasing importance of alternate truck routes
    February 14, 2012
    The fabled Silk Route from China to Europe takes many forms, and is again becoming increasingly important as Patrick Smithreports The ancient Silk Road was never a single caravan route, but covered hundreds of kilometres in width extending in length for around 10,000km. This is the view of the European International Road Transport Union (IRU), and many other countries and organisations, who point out that it is a system of routes covering many countries via a series of branch roads that dates back some 2
  • Serbia and China discuss Preljina-Boljare section of Corridor XI
    September 4, 2017
    Serbia is in talks with China for construction of the Preljina - Boljare section of the pan-European Corridor XI. The section will connect Corridor XI to Corridor X. Corridor XI will run from the Montenegrin port of Bar to Belgrade and on to Bucharest, Romania. Corridor X links Salzburg, Austria, with the Greek Aegean port of Thessaloniki port, via Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia and Macedonia. This includes the construction of a motorway bypass of Belgrade.
  • Highway developments to boost east-west transport
    April 4, 2012
    Huge highway developments are being planned and carried out to further improve East-West transport, with Central Asia a key region as Patrick Smith reports History was made in late 2010, when one of the biggest road building projects ever envisaged in Eastern Europe was given the green-light. It was the occasion when Russian president Dmitry Medvedev signed a law that would allow his country to build its segment of a huge highway around the Black Sea. The idea is to complete the 7,140km highway, wi
  • Bechtel Enka opens first section of Pristina-Skopje motorway
    October 29, 2015
    The first part of the €600 million Arber Dzaferi motorway between Pristina, the capital of Kosovo and Skopje in Macedonia, has opened to traffic. US-Turkish consortium Bechtel Enka is contractor for the 60km road that will eventually link Pristina, capital of the former Serbian province Kosovo, and the city of Skopje, capital of Macedonia, a former Yugoslav republic. The road - numerically Route 6 – is Kosovo’s second motorway and is named after the prominent Albanian intellectual and politician from