Skip to main content

Costs rise for extending the South Luzon Expressway around Manila

South Luzon Tollways Corporation has said the cost of extending the South Luzon Expressway (SLEx) in the Philippines has increased by 27% from nearly US$290 million to almost $348. The SLEx already runs for 36km around the greater Manila area. South Luzon Tollways is preparing the detailed engineering for the 58km SLEx Toll Road Project Number Four - the last of the four expressway sections. South Luzon also will select a construction contractor for the project, split into five works contracts and sch
May 10, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
South Luzon Tollways Corporation has said the cost of extending the South Luzon Expressway (SLEx) in the Philippines has increased by 27% from nearly US$290 million to almost $348.

The SLEx already runs for 36km around the greater Manila area.

South Luzon Tollways is preparing the detailed engineering for the 58km SLEx Toll Road Project Number Four - the last of the four expressway sections. South Luzon also will select a construction contractor for the project, split into five works contracts and scheduled for completion in 2019.

The Number Four section will be a four-lane extended highway from Sto Tomas Batangas to Lucena in Quezon province.

SLTC was incorporated in 2000 primarily for the rehabilitation, construction and expansion of the SLEx from the Alabang Viaduct to Lucena, Quezon. It is a joint venture by the Philippine National Construction Corporation (PNCC) and MTD Manila Expressways (MTDME). MTDME is a unit of MTD Capital Berhad, the second largest tollway operator in Malaysia and the only Malaysian international toll operator.

SLTC also said its board approved a budget of nearly $18 million for SLEx, according to The Standard newspaper. Of this, $9.5 million is for the repair and maintenance of the structure, almost $4.5 million for the enhancement of toll collection system/traffic control and just over $4 million for various traffic improvement activities.

Last year, the toll operator spent around $1.9 million for the repair and restoration of the toll road.

The company also procured equipment amounting to $1.6 million to improve the toll collection system.

Related Content

  • Indra wins tolling deal in Philippine capital Manila
    April 10, 2013
    Indra is supplying its sophisticated urban traffic control system to Metro Manila, the Philippines’ main metropolitan region. The Metro Manila area has more than 11 million residents and accounts for a significant proportion of the country’s entire traffic volume. This technology was selected as it involves proven systems and is already implemented in a number of cities in China, Brazil, Colombia and Spain. Indra is also involved with the toll system for the North Luzon Expressway (NLEX), one of the nation'
  • Bentley’s OpenBridge for Cebu-Cordova link
    February 7, 2024
    The OpenBridge software solution from Bentley Systems played a key role in the development of the Cebu-Cordova bridge project in the Philippines.
  • Italy: Astaldi takes out loan for Turkish motorway project
    June 18, 2015
    Italian civil engineering group Astaldi has underwritten a €4.5 billion (US$5 billion) loan towards the Turkish motorway project of Gebze-Orhangazi-Izmir, which is worth an overall €5.65 billion ($6.4 billion). According to the La Repubblica newspaper, the loan facility will be used to complete the 301km last stretch of the motorway and link the city of Bursa, south of the Sea of Marmara, and the Aegean port of Izmir. Part of the loan will be used to refinance stretches that are under construction for
  • Last link in Vietnam’s North-South Expressway
    May 3, 2024
    The Chi Lang-Huu Nghi section is the last part of the 2,060km-long expressway that connects the southern Mekong Delta with the northern province of Lang Son, bordering China.