Contract awarded for Stonecutters Bridge
The government today (May 11) awarded a contract to an international
consortium to build Stonecutters Bridge, the world's longest cable-stayed
bridge.
The $2.76 billion contract went to the Maeda-Hitachi-Yokogawa-Hsin Chong
Joint Venture.
The 1,600 metre-long bridge, scheduled for completion in June 2008, will
be built in a cable-stayed form, from a blueprint adopted from the winning
design of an international competition held in 2000.
It will have a world-record span of 1,018 metres; much longer than the
Tatara Bridge in Japan, currently the world's longest cable-stayed bridge,
with a main span of 890 metres.
"This is more than an engineering feat in which our engineers will
no doubt take pride. It is a defining piece of architecture for Hong Kong
and a reflection of the confidence of this world city to rise up to the
challenges of the new millennium," said the Secretary for Environment,
Transport and Works, Dr Sarah Liao.
The Stonecutters Bridge will be an important part of Route 8 linking
Tsing Yi and Sha Tin.
"We will be adding an east-west strategic route linking the eastern
part of the New Territories to the airport. This new highway will provide
direct access to Container Terminals No. 8 and No. 9 in Kwai Chung, which
will further enhance Hong Kong as an important international logistics
and transportation hub," she said.
The director of Highways, Mr Mak Chai-kwong, said the deck of Stonecutters
Bridge would be one of the world's tallest.
The Kwai Chung Container Terminal is one of the world's busiest ports.
To allow navigation for container vessels, the bridge deck must be built
with a vertical clearance of at least 73.5 metres above sea level.
The two circular steel-concrete bridge towers will be almost 300 metres
tall, just under 100 metres higher than the towers on the nearby Tsing
Ma Bridge.
Ends/Tuesday, May 11, 2004
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