Norway offers lots on large infrastructure project

A design illustration of the Julsundet Bridge The 2km-long Julsundet Bridge will be one of the world鈥檚 longest suspension bridges.

The Norwegian Public Roads Administration (NPRA) is to put between , for the construction of the new E39 脜lesund-Molde road.

Connecting the fjord town of Molde with the port town of 脜lesund on the country鈥檚 west coast, the works to the E39 have been split into five sections and will, upon completion, 鈥渃reate one residential and labour market鈥.

Multiple bridges, single lane tunnels, four-lane roads and a subsea tunnel are among the structures that will be built.

Contracts being offered for the works range in size, from tens of millions up to four billion kroner (approximately 鈧390 million).

The two largest contracts being offered by NPRA will see the construction of the Romsdalsfjord Tunnel and the Julsund Bridge, which will incorporate a separate lane for pedestrians, cyclists and slow-moving vehicles.

Harald Inge Johnsen, NPRA鈥檚 project manager, said, 鈥淭his is a good and important project. We have divided it into a significantly higher number of contracts than the number of plan sections.鈥

NPRA, which is aiming to opent the new European road in 2030, will provide addition information on the E39 脜lesund-Molde project to contractors, subcontractors and consultancies at an upcoming meeting. This is currently due to place on Monday 21 June via Microsoft Teams.

Johnsen said, 鈥淭hrough hard work, the NPRA has succeeded in developing good solutions for bridges, tunnels and the rest of the road.

鈥淣ow we are looking forward to starting a dialogue with the construction industry. Together we will be building a unified M酶re og Romsdal. We expect ample response from the market.鈥

The E39 脜lesund-Molde road project is part of the National Transport Plan put in place by the Norwegian parliament, Storting.

The government鈥檚 2021 budget has around 80 billion Kroner (鈧7.8 billion) allocated to the improvement of the country鈥檚 transport network.

While the existing E39 route spans a total of 1,330km and runs north to south from Tr酶ndelag in Norway to N酶rresundby in Denmark, the upgrade works in Norway primarily aim to provide ferry-free travel across its coastal region.

They will be carried out in five sections; from Breivika/脜lesund to Digernes, Digernes to 脴rskogfjellet, 脴rskogfjellet to Vik, Vik to Julb酶en and Julb酶en-Bols酶nes to Molde.

The NPRA said, 鈥淚n addition to the 脜lesund-Molde road, a new county road to Gossen will be built across the strait of Kjerringsundet in close cooperation with M酶re og Romsdal County Administration.

鈥淭his will provide a ferry-free crossing of the Romsdalsfjord. At the same time, Otr酶ya, Mid酶ya and Gossen will be connected to the mainland. Three ferry connections will become superfluous and will be discontinued. The entire stretch of the E39 will be 75 kilometres long.鈥

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