Skip to main content

Panama's metro line 2 awarded

The concession to build Panama City's metro line No. 2 has been awarded to a consortium comprised of Brazilian company Norberto Odebrecht and Spanish infrastructure giant FCC. The 22 kilometre long elevated line will connect the city's northern and eastern sectors and line No. 1. The consortium, known as Consorcio Línea 2, offered US$1.86 billion for civil works, US$50.7 million for maintenance works, and US$214 million for financing, totalling roughly US$2.2bn, according to Metro de Panama.
May 18, 2015 Read time: 1 min
The concession to build Panama City's metro line No. 2 has been awarded to a consortium comprised of Brazilian company Norberto 4740 Odebrecht and Spanish infrastructure giant 5656 FCC.

The 22 kilometre long elevated line will connect the city's northern and eastern sectors and line No. 1.

The consortium, known as Consorcio Línea 2, offered US$1.86 billion for civil works, US$50.7 million for maintenance works, and US$214 million for financing, totalling roughly US$2.2bn, according to Metro de Panama.

This alliance, in which the Brazilian company owns 60 per cent and the Spanish company 40 per cent, also built Panama City's US$1.7 billion line No. 1, which has been operating for one year and was the first to launch in Central America.

Construction should begin within two months, and the consortium will have 46 months to complete works.

Related Content

  • October 22, 2013
    Brazilian PPP metro contract signed
    Brazilian highway and metro concessionaire CCR has signed a US$1.85 billion contract for a public-private partnership (PPP) to carry out phase II work on Bahia state capital Salvador's metro system in northeast Brazil. The PPP involves building a total of 33.4 kilometres of metro lines and 19 stations and includes building an extension to the metro's existing 6.6 kilometre line 1 and preparing a project to extend the line some a further 3.6 kilometres.
  • July 25, 2014
    Bogota's metro tender delayed
    The tender for Bogota, Colombia’s decades-long and much-delayed first metro line has been pushed to the first quarter of 2015 following expansion of the US$3.6 billion project. The original project included the construction of the first line of Bogota’s 26.5 kilometre long metro, which would have 28 stations and be used by around 600,000 people a day. This is the first of four lines planned to be built in the next 30 years. The metro will complement the existing urban transport system by handling 50 p
  • December 6, 2013
    Romanian rail line to be modernised
    Romanian state railway company CFR SA has awarded a contract worth US$519 million to a consortium including Strabag for the modernisation of the 42.2 kilometre long railway section between Vințu de Jos and Simeria in western Romania near the city of Sibiu. The modernisation works comprise the renovation of the railway section, including five stations located outside of the densely populated residential areas, rerouting of the track, tunnelling and bridge building as well as the track bed structure. In t
  • August 1, 2014
    Santiago issues tender for number six metro line
    Chile's Metro de Santiago has called an international tender for the acquisition of lighting systems and their installation in the city's new number 6 line. According to tender documents, rights to participate can be purchased until 29 July. Technical and economic bids are due on 3 October. Technical proposals will be opened the same day, while bids will be unveiled on 24 October. The line is a US$1.06 billion project that will run 15.3 kilometres across the capital from centrally located Providencia