Parsons Brinckerhoff Providing Project Management Consulting Services for Saudi Arabia Rail Project

Sept. 18, 2013
Parsons Brinckerhoff, in association with Flour Corp., will provide project management consulting services for the design and construction of a new rail line between the Red Sea and Persian Gulf in Saudi Arabia.

Parsons Brinckerhoff, in association with Flour Corp., will provide project management consulting services for the design and construction of a new rail line between the Red Sea and Persian Gulf in Saudi Arabia.

The Saudi Landbridge project is a 950-kilometer (590-mile) double-track railway connecting Jeddah on the Red Sea — the busiest port in Saudi Arabia and a major gateway for cargo from Europe and North America — with the city of Riyadh. The new railway will connect with the existing 450-kilometer (280-mile) line between Riyadh and King Abdul Aziz Port at Dammam—another major commercial port in Saudi Arabia—on the Gulf coast. The project also includes a new 115-kilometer (71-mile) extension between Dammam and Jubail. The Saudi Landbridge project is being developed as a state-funded project by the Saudi Public Investment Fund.

Parsons Brinckerhoff performed the original planning for the project in 1997 as part of the overall planning for railway programs in Saudi Arabia. The firm will be providing project management services for the Saudi Landbridge in association with Fluor Corp., which was awarded the management consultancy contract by the Saudi Public Investment Fund. The contract period is approximately eight years.

Parsons Brinckerhoff will provide support for development of complex elements of the new railway, such as the tunnels and bridges that will be needed to cross the varied terrain. The project will include several civil and track contracts, at least one design-build civil and track works contract in the vicinity of Jeddah, and a significant amount of tunneling and earthworks.

The new railway will serve primarily as a freight route that will significantly improve the efficiency of cargo transport. The port-to-port connection time will be reduced to approximately 10 hours from the three days currently needed to move cargo by ship between the ports. The schedule and cost savings from construction and operation of the new line will provide a substantial boost to the regional freight economy. The railway will also be used for passenger transport in future, potentially serving millions of passengers each year.


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