Tender awarded for SA's longest cable-stayed bridge

Construction to start in February 2019.
Issued by SANRAL
Johannesburg, Sep 21, 2018

SANRAL announced today the tender for the second of two mega-bridges as part of the N2 Wild Coast project has been awarded. The bridge will be built near Lusikisiki over the Msikaba gorge. The nearby Mtentu river bridge started construction in January this year and both form part of the future new N2 Wild Coast Road

The successful bidder was Concor Mota-Engil Joint Venture, a strategic partnership between Concor, a large and majority black-owned South African civil engineering company, and Mota-Engil, a major international construction firm.

Concor brings a proven track record in the construction of major roads and bridge projects in South Africa and Africa, while Mota-Engil has experience in large-scale cable-stayed bridge projects and delivery of major civil engineering projects throughout Africa.

The construction is due to start in February 2019, for 33 months, after an initial three-month ramp-up period starting in October 2018. The total contract amount is approximately R1.65 billion, excluding VAT.

The tender award comes after the agency announced in July 2017 it had to be re-advertised as SANRAL received no fully responsive tenders for the initial bid.

The tender was re-advertised on 3 November 2017 and closed the new bid on 11 April 2018. The long period was required due to the size and complexity of the tender.

Some interesting facts and stats about the bridge:

* 28 000 m3 of concrete.* 2 700 tons of structural steel.* 2 500 tons of cables.* Height of piers will be 127m.* Length of main span 580m: it will be the longest main span constructed by cable-stay method in Africa, and the second longest main bridge span in Africa after the recently completed 3 041m total length and 680m main span Maputo-Catembe suspension bridge in Mozambique.* Back span approximately 130m.* Height of deck approximately 195m above the valley floor: it will be the third highest bridge in Africa after Bloukraans at 216m and the Mtentu bridge at 223m.