Nyakahita–Kazo–Kamwenge–Fort Portal Road Explained

Country:UGA
Nyakahita–Kazo–Kamwenge–Fort Portal Road
Length Mi:129
History:Designation in 2011
Completion in 2017
Direction A:South
Terminus A:Nyakahita
Junction:Kazo
Ibanda
Kamwenge
Direction B:North
Terminus B:Fort Portal

The Nyakahita–Kazo–Kamwenge–Fort Portal Road is a road in the Western Region of Uganda, connecting the towns of Nyakahita and Kazo in Kiruhura District, Ibanda in Ibanda District, Kamwenge in Kamwenge District, and Fort Portal in Kabarole District.[1]

Location

The road starts at Nyakahita, on the Masaka–Mbarara Road, about 67km (42miles) east of Mbarara, the largest city in the Ankole sub-region. The road continues through four western Ugandan districts to end at Fort Portal, a total of about 208km (129miles).[2] The coordinates of the road near Kamwenge are 0°11'09.0"N, 30°27'14.0"E (Latitude:0.185833; Longitude:30.453889).

Upgrading to bitumen

Before 2011, the entire road was poor grade gravel surface. In that year, the upgrading of the road to bitumen was divided into three sections: Nyakahita–Kazo 68km (42miles), Kazo–Kamwenge 75km (47miles), and Kamwenge–Fort Portal 66km (41miles).[3]

The Nyakahita–Kazo section was contracted to the China Communications Construction Company for USh:134 billion. The consulting engineers on the project were J. Burrow. This section was completed in June 2013.[3] The Kazo–Kamwenge section was contracted to the China Railway Seventh Group for USh:167 billion. The Canadian engineering firm SNC Lavalin performed the consulting and supervision. Construction on these two sections began in May 2011. Funding was sourced from the African Development Bank and the Ugandan government.[4] [5] Work on the Kazo–Kamwenge Road ended in June 2014.[3]

Work to upgrade the 66km (41miles) Kamwenge–Fort Portal section was assigned to the China Railway Seventh Group. The USh:120 billion cost is funded jointly by the government of Uganda and the International Development Association. Work began in February 2015,[1] and is expected to end in July 2016.[3] In August 2017, the Daily Monitor, a Ugandan English language daily, reported that this section of the road had been completed.[6]

See also

External links

-0.3742°N 31.2714°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 27 February 2015 . President Launches Construction of Kamwenge–Fort Portal Road . 25 July 2015 . Uganda Media Centre . Press Release.
  2. Web site: 25 July 2015. 2012. Ongoing Major Projects. URSSI. Uganda Road Support Sector Initiative (URSSI). dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151226050624/http://ugandaroadsector.org/Ongoing-major-%20projects-in-uganda.php. 26 December 2015. dmy-all.
  3. Web site: Implementation of The NRM Manifesto 2011-2016 . EAAB . East Africa Agribusiness (EAAB) . 25 July 2015 . January 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150715041608/http://ea-agribusiness.co.ug/implementation-of-the-nrm-manifesto-2011-2016/ . 15 July 2015 . dead .
  4. Web site: May 2011. Nyakahita-Kazo-Kamwenge Road Works Launched . 25 July 2015. Uganda National Roads Authority (UNRA) . UNRA.
  5. Web site: Nyakahita-Kamwenge Road Construction Starts . 18 May 2011 . 25 July 2015 . Denis . Kampala . Dibele . New Vision.
  6. Web site: New tarmac road boosting business in western Uganda . Kampala. 10 August 2017 . 13 August 2017 . and Fedinand Tuhame . Felix Basiime, Alex Ashaba . Daily Monitor.