Skip to main content

Qatar planning massive expressway programme

The authorities in Qatar are planning to launch a series of public tenders for major infrastructure projects. Details of the tenders and the scale of the contracts have yet to be released but these will involve major highway construction projects as well as other associated infrastructure works.
April 19, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The authorities in Qatar are planning to launch a series of public tenders for major infrastructure projects. Details of the tenders and the scale of the contracts have yet to be released but these will involve major highway construction projects as well as other associated infrastructure works.

The country is already planning new building contracts for a series of stadia that will house the 2022 World Cup football event. These will have to be linked with new highways featuring the latest traffic management technology to major urban areas and existing link road links. A key portion of the upcoming tender process will be for the Expressway programme being launched over the next 5-7 years, which involves no less than 30 separate construction contracts for both urban and rural roads and primary routes both in and around Doha City.

The packages will be in conventional design, bid, build or design and build packages and the authorities in Qatar are looking for bids from an array of consultants to help handle the projects.

More comprehensive details can be found on the Qatar Public Works Authority website: www.ashghal.gov.qa and further information will be released by the authorities in due course.

Related Content

  • Asking drivers what information they need: radical but effective
    March 19, 2014
    When Texas A&M Transportation Institute was asked to devise a temporary traveller information system for work zones, it started by asking drivers what they need. Robert Brydia explains the thinking, implementation and results. US Interstate 35 (I-35) runs roughly north–south originating in Laredo, Texas and ends 1,500 miles away in Duluth, Minnesota having passed through Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri and Iowa. Within Texas the I-35 splits into I-35E and I-35W passing through Dallas and Fort Worth respectiv
  • A new beginning for travel information, based on users' needs
    February 3, 2012
    Despite its name, the EU's forthcoming SUNSET project could represent a new beginning for travel information services. Here, Susan Grant-Muller and Frances Hodgson from the Institute for Transport Studies at the University of Leeds detail a project which is intended to exert a greater influence on network users' travel habits
  • Houston traffic technology ‘going global’
    December 17, 2012
    A real-time traffic data collection system developed by the Texas A&M University Transportation Institute (TTI) is going nationwide and could go global, according to the university. The development, known as AWAM (Anonymous Wireless Address Matching), uses the first portion of the MAC address from anonymous wireless devices, such as Bluetooth-enabled devices, carried in vehicles to measure the travel time between two points along freeways and arterial roads in rural and urban environments. It provides real-
  • GIS mapping smoothes ITS operations and increases efficiencies
    January 30, 2012
    Alexander Gerschenkron, the famous economic historian, once posited a benefit for those countries which come late to economic development: that they could introduce the latest technology and thus jump over some of the standard development paths followed by their predecessors . It is entirely possible to make the same observation of late-comers to ITS: that they can gain from the pains of those who went before and more easily implement best practice in ITS. As a consequence, it is entirely likely the Abu Dha