The province has selected the group of companies that will design, build and partially finance Vancouver’s Broadway subway line.
The Ministry of Transportation said Friday that the project will be handled by a group of companies led by Acciona Infrastructure Canada and Ghella Canada, which beat out two other bids, including one led by SNC Lavalin.
Acciona is a Spanish conglomerate, while Ghella is a multinational construction company based in Italy.
The $2.83-billion project will see the SkyTrain Millennium Line extended 5.7 kilometres and six stops, from the existing VCC-Clark station to Arbutus Street.
The Transportation Investment Corporation, the Crown corporation that has managed major projects like the Port Mann Bridge, will oversee the construction consortium.
The project is being delivered through a design-build-finance model, meaning the Acciona-Ghella team will front some of the cash.
The Broadway line will be built under the NDP’s community benefits agreement, which requires workers to belong to specific unions and provides apprenticeships and more roles for women and Indigenous people.
Critics have said the agreement is unfair to workers who don’t join those unions, and that it adds significantly to project costs.
The province had set a construction start goal for the fall of 2020, with a completion date of 2025. That timeline is no longer clear under the coronavirus pandemic.
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