Tag: motorway

  • Wi-Fi on A1 motorway between Salzburg and Vienna by 2022

    Wi-Fi on A1 motorway between Salzburg and Vienna by 2022

    ASFINAG wants to make Austrian motorways fit for Wi-Fi technology. The first test section is being set up between Salzburg and Vienna, Heute reports.

    175 first boxes will be installed on overhead indicators along the A1 motorway between Salzburg and Vienna.

    The system is intended to inform drivers of modern vehicles about accidents, construction works or speed limits and is intended to increase road safety.

    By 2023, all Austrian motorways will be equiped with a wireless network for mobile internet access.

    The company plans to install a total of 500 Wi-Fi boxes along all motorways throughout Austria.

    ASFINAG is a federal agency that plans, finance, build, maintain, operate and collect toll for 2,200 kilometres of motorways and expressways in Austria.

  • Over 23 000 people killed in road accidents in the EU in 2018

    Over 23 000 people killed in road accidents in the EU in 2018

    In 2018, 23 339 people died in road accidents in the EU, 45% being passenger car occupants, 21% pedestrians, 15% motorcycles, 8% bicycles and 12% other categories, shows Eurostat.

    There has been a downward trend over the last 10 years in the number of road traffic victims in the EU.

    Compared with 2008, the number of road fatalities has fallen by more than 13 000 persons (-37%), from almost 37 000 to less than 24 000 in 2018.

    Highest number of road fatalities in Romania and Bulgaria

    Compared with the population of each member state, the lowest rates of road fatalities in 2018 were observed in Ireland (29 road traffic victims per million inhabitants), Denmark (30), Sweden (32) and the Netherlands (35), ahead of Malta (38), Spain (39) and Germany (40).

    At the opposite end of the scale, the highest rates were recorded in Romania (96 road traffic victims per million inhabitants), Bulgaria (87), Croatia and Latvia (both 77) and Poland (75).

    In 2018, there were in total 52 road traffic victims per million inhabitants in the EU as a whole.

  • Where are the densest motorway networks across EU regions

    Where are the densest motorway networks across EU regions

    Most European capitals and large cities are surrounded by a ring of motorways in order to meet the high demand for road transport originating from these metropolitan areas.

    As a result, dense motorway networks can be found around capitals such as Budapest (120 km per 1000 km2), Wien (109 km per 1000 km2), Madrid (96 km per 1000 km2), Prague and Berlin (both 91 km per 1000 km2).

    Since the motorways are generally concentrated in a ring close to the cities, the motorway density often decreases with the size of the area. For example, the motorway density reported for relatively small region of Wien is higher than for the much larger region of Île-de-France, even though the motorway network of Paris is larger per se.

    Other densely populated regions with high motorway density include the Randstad region in the western part of the Netherlands: Zuid-Holland (127 km per 1000 km2), Utrecht (125 km per 1000 km2) and Noord-Holland (108 km per 1000 km2).

    High motorway densities are also found around the major seaports of northern Europe: the motorway densities of the regions of Bremen (205 km per 1000 km2) with the port of Bremerhaven, of Zuid-Holland with the port of Rotterdam (127 km per 1000 km2) and of Hamburg (114 km per 1000 km2) are among the highest of all European regions.

    Another reason for the high density of the motorway network in some central European countries (such as Germany) is the proportionately high volume of transit freight traffic.

    The density of motorways on islands is generally low, as islands cannot be reached directly by road. Instead, they rely on sea or air transport. Even so, the motorway density of the Canary Islands appears relatively high at 37 km per 1000 km².

  • AKTOR accelerated works at A10 Sebes – Turda Motorway

    AKTOR accelerated works at A10 Sebes – Turda Motorway

    AKTOR has significantly accelerated works, with the project marking considerable progress.

    The construction of the 24.25 km section extending from Paraul Iovului to Aiud by the AKTOR-Euro Construct Joint Venture, now employs over 600 employees, with AKTOR planning to increase staff to over 750, for the completion of the project.  

    The company has also increased the specialized construction equipment used in the project, as 139 trucks, 26 compactors, 31 excavators, 8 bulldozers, 5 finishers (asphalt and BSC paving machines), 7 graders, 9 concrete/concrete pump trucks and other specialized construction machinery, such as build buldo-excavators, water tanks, cranes, front-loaders, big and small generators, drilling machines,have been deployed along the section.  

    Additionally 2 asphalt stations, 2 stations of subbase stabilized with cement and a concrete production station are also now in full operation to support the execution of asphalt paving, BSC laying, earthworks soil consolidation and roadside drainage works which are currently being carried out intensively at various sites of the project. 

  • Astaldi signed a contract worth EUR 356 million in Romania

    Astaldi signed a contract worth EUR 356 million in Romania

    Astaldi signed a contract worth EUR 356 million for the construction of more than 30 kilometres of the Sibiu-Pitesti Motorway, the most important section under construction in Romania.

    It is an EPC contract and concerns the design and construction of Lot 5 of the Sibiu-Pitesti Motorway, from Km 92+600 to Km 122+950. The planned duration of the works is 60 months, 12 months of which for design and 48 months for construction.

    The contract is financed partly with EU funds (85%) and partly with the State budget (15%) and includes the adjustment of contract prices starting from the date of the submission of the bid.

    Moreover, an advance payment is envisaged in the contract, both at the start of the design phase and at the start of the construction.

    The Customer is CNAIR, a state-owned company under the responsibility of the Romania’s Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure for which Astaldi is currently engaged, among others, in the construction of the Braila Bridge, a suspension bridge over the Danube of approximately 2 kilometres in length with more than 23 kilometres of connecting roads, as well as of approximately 20 kilometres of the Ogra–Campia Turzii Motorway (Lot 2).

    Astaldi in Romania represents a consolidated business reality since 1991.