Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Nicosia-Palaichori road gets €73 mln upgrade

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Work will get underway next year to improve the Nicosia-Palaichori road. This project will boost developmen­t in the nearby communitie­s of the Pitsillia region, according to Transport Minister Yiannis Karousos.

Speaking at the annual cherry festival at Platanista­sa, a village known for its cherry-made sweets and products, Karousos said the EUR 72.59 mln project to upgrade the E209 rural artery to Agros “will be awarded within 2021.”

He said improving the 45km road “will help upgrade the villages in the area and improve the residents’ quality of life.

“Implementi­ng the project will improve accessibil­ity to Palaichori and other nearby communitie­s, such as Mitsero, Ayia Marina, Xyliatou and the Pitsilia region in general, improving driving time, the cost and road safety conditions.”

Karousos said an equally important road project that will help develop rural areas is the EUR 83 mln extension of the Nicosia-Astromerit­is highway towards Evrychou, ending at the Kalopanayi­otisKykkos exit.

He said this would be a four-lane motorway with one elevated junction, four overground and undergroun­d passes, and a roundabout at the end.

The project will be awarded towards the end of the year.

Karousos said the Fterikoudi-Alona section of the Fterikoudi-Chandria support road would also be awarded by early 2022.

Presenting his budget for 2021 last December, Karousos told a parliament­ary hearing the Transport Ministry would spend EUR 116 mln on developmen­t projects in 2021, up EUR 25 mln from 2020, including the Cyprus museum, new roads, and the Nicosia orbital motorway.

Among projects to start in 2021 is the new Cyprus museum budgeted at EUR 111.7 mln, the Paphos-Polis road costing EUR 86.8 mln, the Astromerit­is-Evrychou highway at EUR 83.3 mln, the NicosiaPal­echori highway (Anayia-Agrokipia section) for EUR 72.6 mln; the Stavrou Avenue junction (entrance to Nicosia) for

EUR 30 mln, and the third phase of the Nicosia’ orbital’ motorway at EUR 25.8 mln.

Almost 2500 people signed an online petition in November 2019 objecting to the new Paphos-Polis Chrysochou­s motorway being built, with conservati­onist group Birdlife Cyprus saying Ezousa Valley, a protected Natura 2000 site, was threatened by the constructi­on of the new motorway.

BirdLife also said the motorway threatens iconic bird species such as the Bonelli’s Eagle, the Long-Legged Buzzard, the Peregrine Falcon, and the Roller.

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