Skip to main content

Zimbabwe highway project linking with its neighbours

Zimbabwe’s Beitbridge to Chirundu highway link now looks set for a complete upgrade. The project has been planned for over 10 years but has faced a series of setbacks and delays, with funding having proved one of the biggest stumbling blocks in the past. The 897km highway runs from Beitbridge, located on the border with South Africa in the south of Zimbabwe all the way up to Chirundu, which is just over the border with Zambia in the north. The route includes part of the A4 highway in the south and the A1 hi
November 28, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Zimbabwe’s Beitbridge to Chirundu highway link now looks set for a complete upgrade. The project has been planned for over 10 years but has faced a series of setbacks and delays, with funding having proved one of the biggest stumbling blocks in the past. The 897km highway runs from Beitbridge, located on the border with South Africa in the south of Zimbabwe all the way up to Chirundu, which is just over the border with Zambia in the north. The route includes part of the A4 highway in the south and the A1 highway in the north of Zimbabwe. The project will be split into five separate sections and passes through Zimbabwe’s capital Harare. A new ring road around Harare is planned as part of the programme.

The work involves widening the route along its length so that it will feature dual lanes in either direction. The existing route features a single lane in either direction and is no longer able to cope with demand, as well as having a poor record for safety while the road surface is also in poor condition. The Beitbridge border post is the busiest in Southern Africa and an upgrade to the route will help boost Zimbabwe’s struggling economy.

Austrian firm Geiger International is handling an engineering, procurement and construction deal for the Harare to Beitbridge stretch of the project, worth US$984 million. The highway is being handled as a 25 year concession package. Construction work is expected to commence in March 2017 and the project will be carried out under the build-operate-transfer model. Local sub-contractors are expected to handle around 40% of the works required.

The construction work for the Chirundu to Harare stretch of the highway will be carried out by China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) and should take 36 months to complete. This will also be carried out as an engineering, procurement and construction deal.

In all, the project could cost as much as $3 billion. The cost of the Chirundu to Beitbridge highway upgrade has increased considerably since the project was first proposed. The project has also been the subject of considerable scrutiny in Zimbabwe. When first proposed it was expected to cost $2 billion, with the pricetag then increasing to $2.7 billion and now expected to reach $3 billion. Some of the route is challenging however, particularly in the north close to the border with Zambia where it runs through the Hurungwe Safari area where there will be a need to protect the environment.

The project is one of several highway upgrades planned in Zimbabwe. An upgrade to the A8 route between Beitbridge and Victoria Falls and which runs through Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, is also planned.

Related Content

  • Turkey’s new Marmara Highway project
    June 8, 2017
    By the end of 2018, a shiny new strip of asphalt will skirt around Turkey’s largest city, Istanbul, providing a new transport connection.
  • Road transport key to Africa's trade links
    February 17, 2012
    Road transport is the key to improving Africa's links within its own territory, and further afield as Patrick Smith reports. Development of road transportation is the key to the future of the African economy, and countries on the continent are making great strides. According to a report by a transport infrastructure expert at the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), within the next 15 years the value of trade in Africa could reach US$250 billion if a $32 billion investment is made to integrate
  • Regensburg road revamp will widen key stretch
    February 16, 2018
    Work is now commencing on widening a stretch of the A3 Autobahn where it passes through the Bavarian city of Regensburg. The 15km section of the A3 will be widened from its present two lanes to three lanes. The project is costing €270 million and will be carried out on the section from the junction between the A3 and B8 at Rosenhof to the east of Regensburg and running 15km westwards, past the junction with the A93 Autobahn route that connects with the A9 and Munich to the south. This work is needed as the
  • Chicago bypass upgrade
    May 14, 2020
    Chicago’s bypass is being widened and upgraded