Skip to main content

Study moves ahead Brussels ring road proposal

Studies for the proposed Brussels Ring Road will receive EU support. Co-financing worth some €1 million from the EU’s TEN-T Programme will help pay for a study to optimise the Brussels Ring Road and improve its traffic flow and safety. The Belgian authorities will pay the remaining €1 million for the study. The main aim of this study is to try and separate local and transit traffic, without extending the existing road infrastructure.
November 22, 2013 Read time: 1 min
Studies for the proposed Brussels Ring Road will receive EU support. Co-financing worth some €1 million from the EU’s TEN-T Programme will help pay for a study to optimise the Brussels Ring Road and improve its traffic flow and safety. The Belgian authorities will pay the remaining €1 million for the study. The main aim of this study is to try and separate local and transit traffic, without extending the existing road infrastructure.

More specifically, the EU co-funded study includes an Environmental Impact Assessment and the pre-design for the Brussels Ring Roads East and West, as well as an examination of the possibility to set up a public-private partnership (PPP) for the future works. The study will be monitored by the 7021 Trans-European Transport Network Executive Agency (TEN-T EA) and is set to be completed by December 2015.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The M-10 motorway to be a first PPP for Belarus
    July 3, 2019
    As Belarus opts for its first PPP, contractors should take note of contract nuances when working in CIS countries, explains Ove Arup’s Steve Gilpin Belarus is part of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), a regional governmental organisation of 10 ex-Soviet bloc countries. The CIS includes Russia as well as Turkmenistan which is an associate member. Some countries, including Georgia, were part of the CIS but have left the organisation. Arup’s projects in CIS countries have been commissioned by
  • The challenge of integrating new mobility, a study
    February 6, 2020
    An ongoing study is benchmarking progress towards adapting roads to new mobility, explains Christophe Nicodème*
  • IRF wins highly prestigious Prince Michael Road Safety Award
    March 28, 2018
    The International Road Federation (IRF Geneva & IRF India) has received the prestigious Prince Michael International Road Safety Award 2017 for its Enhanced First Aid Programme The prize was handed over to the IRF chairman, Kiran Kapila and Susanna Zammataro, IRF executive director at a special ceremony held at The Savoy in London on Tuesday 12th December in the presence of His Royal Highness, Prince Michael of Kent. Since 2015, IRF has undertaken several initiatives to strengthen ‘’pre-hospital’’ trauma
  • Trail blazing for the Gordie Howe Bridge
    February 23, 2024
    Gordie Howe International Bridge between Canada and the US will become the first international bridge to link national trail systems across the border.