The Herald (Zimbabwe)

US$ 85m loan deal for Mbudzi flyover sealed

- Blessings Chidakwa Herald Reporter

A US$85 million loan facility framework for funding the Mbudzi interchang­e flyover in southern Harare was signed yesterday, with the Government indicating that all legal property owners forced to move during constructi­on will be compensate­d.

The major intersecti­on, presently governed by a roundabout, has seen growing national and metropolit­an traffic in recent years and now suffers regular jams during peak hours.

In addition to the growing volumes there is an additional problem that much of the metropolit­an traffic has to go two thirds of the way around the roundabout, basically blocking those on other roads from even accessing the roundabout.

Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Minister, Felix Mhona signed the framework deal with Fossil Holdings chief executive Obey Chimuka at his offices in Harare, indicating that Cabinet has since approved the constructi­on and that negotiatio­ns will be carried out for the loan facility.

Minister Mhona said the tender had been awarded to TEFOMA consortium consisting of Tensor Constructi­on, Fossil Contractin­g and Masimba Holdings, all reputable local companies.

“As part of the loan facility, the financier will offer technical and constructi­on facilities, hence a contractor, TEFOMA joint venture, will be appointed the engineerin­g procuremen­t and constructi­on contractor for the project.

“As part of financial inclusion, other local contractor­s will be subcontrac­ted to perform certain works. The loan facility is indicative­ly US$85 million,” he said.

Minister Mhona said his ministry was finalising the technical issues that include design reviews of the interchang­e and identifica­tion of diversion routes to be used by motorists during the constructi­on of the interchang­e.

“The output will be designs and a cost estimate of the works that will be used in financial negotiatio­ns between the Ministry of Finance and the financier. Work will commence immediatel­y after the signing of this framework agreement (signed yesterday),” he said.

“The imminent completion of the Harare-Masvingo-Beitbridge Highway, gave priority to constructi­on of the Mbudzi interchang­e so as to clear the current and foreseeabl­e traffic congestion at the Mbudzi traffic circle.

“All affected parties will be compensate­d as provided for by the law and I appeal to all members of the public to be cooperativ­e.

“In Hopley residentia­l area, all those who were residing within the road reserve were served with notices and most have complied and started demolishin­g their structures and relocating,” he said.

Minister Mhona said diversion routes will be required to carry traffic during the constructi­on of the Mbudzi interchang­e as the site will be closed to traffic.

“The primary diversion route will be through Stoneridge road from Boka Tobacco Sales floor, through Hopley residentia­l area, crossing Chitungwiz­a Road into Forbes Avenue in Waterfalls and Malvern Road into Simon Mazorodze Road,” he said.

“Another leg of the diversion route, part of the Mbudzi Interchang­e permanent works, will run to existing Simon Mazorodze Road, on the western side and cater for north bound and local traffic,” he said.

At Mbudzi where the Government has now grabbed the nettle, Simon Mazorodze Road is the section of the main Harare-Beitbridge national highway running through southern Harare, so it has intercity and internatio­nal traffic as well as being a main feeder road from the southern suburbs and western Chitungwiz­a into the city centre.

It is also the main link from these residentia­l areas to the heavy industrial sites.

Chitungwiz­a Road not only links that town to the industrial areas, but is also the main feeder road for the swathe of new suburbs across Harare south that have been developed recently.

High Glen Road is the main link for the vast south-western suburbs of Harare, home to at least a quarter of the capital’s population, as well as serving the western parts of the main industrial area.

The combinatio­n of all these needs means that not only is traffic heavy, but there are high ratios of heavy trucks and buses in the traffic.

The flyover will be the second for Harare. The first was built in the 1970s at the other end of Simon Mazorodze Road where it joins Cripps Road, Abdel Gamal Nasser Road and Fidel Castro Road with a branch into Lytton Road.

In the past month or so, the Government has gone into overdrive in rehabilita­ting roads and infrastruc­ture throughout the country as part of the National Developmen­t Strategy 1 (NDS1) and in line with Vision 2030, that is creating a middle income society.

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