The construction of the most expensive highway in Russia is canceled

3
The commissioning of the Dzhubga-Sochi highway, which is considered the most expensive in Russia, will not take place in 2024. The reason is that this project is not a priority.





This statement was made by Deputy Prime Minister Maxim Akimov during an interview with the publication "Vedomosti".

The official explained that in Russia there are many projects for the development of transport infrastructure that need to be implemented by 2024, and the Dzhubga-Sochi road is not one of them. It’s too early to talk about the imminent construction of a bridge connecting Sakhalin with “mainland” Russia.

There is an infrastructure plan for the period until 2024, where the construction of the Dzhubga-Sochi highway and the Krasnodar-Grozny high-speed highway were not included. This happened due to insufficient elaboration of these projects.

Earlier, Rosavtodor company reported that it was decided to reduce the estimate for the construction of the Dzhubga-Sochi highway to 1 trillion rubles by reducing the length of the route to 80 kilometers. This means that the route will be laid to Sochi not from Dzhubga, but from Tuapse. Despite the reduction in the planned volume of work, the completion date, which was originally scheduled for 2025, was decided to be postponed to 2027.
3 comments
Information
Dear reader, to leave comments on the publication, you must sign in.
  1. DPN
    +1
    6 June 2019 08: 56
    Here are those and the market-crap all this, without a planned economy there is no other way. The market judged and added 13 years of construction. Or maybe the losers considered everything? or 1 for a construction site, two in your pocket.
  2. +1
    6 June 2019 09: 12
    Do not understand anything. The longer you build, the more you optimize.
    1 tril / 80 km = 12,5 billion (200 million bucks) per kilometer. Not bad. but you can later master more, only 2-3 aircraft carriers at a price ..
  3. 0
    6 June 2019 13: 08
    From Grozny to Krasnodar ... But is it necessary? )