$1.6m Kukudu Suspension Bridge Officially Opens

$1.6m Kukudu Suspension Bridge Officially Opens
April 25, 2026

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$1.6m Kukudu Suspension Bridge Officially Opens

New SBD 1.6M Kukudu bridge improves safe access to schools, clinics and markets for rural Western Province communities.

Kududu Student walking through the new bridge. Photo: Tavuli News- Solomon Islands

Residents of Kukudu and surrounding districts have celebrated the official handover of a new suspension bridge, a critical infrastructure project designed to end years of hazardous travel during high tides and seasonal flooding.

The SBD 1.6 million project replaces an unreliable crossing, providing a permanent link between local schools, medical clinics, and markets. For the students, health workers, and vendors of Western Province, the bridge represents a fundamental shift in daily safety and economic security.

Speaking at the handover ceremony, the World Bank’s resident representative for Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, Bernard Harborne, pointed out the project’s focus on essential access.

World Bank’s resident representative Bernard Harborne with the guests. Photo: Tavuli News- Solomon Islands

“This bridge links to daily functions, providing inclusive and reliable access for services and supporting your livelihood,” Mr Harborne said. He noted that the investment was specifically directed at ensuring staff, students, and market vendors were no longer cut off from their communities by the elements.

The project was funded by the World Bank via the Provincial Capacity Development Fund (PCDF) under the IEDCR initiative. The program is designed to strengthen local government capacity while delivering tangible infrastructure to remote areas.

The collaboration between technical officers and local leadership was cited as the primary reason for the project’s success. “This bridge reflects your priorities and it belongs to you,” Mr Harborne told the gathered crowd.

For those living in the shadow of the previous crossing’s failures, the bridge is more than a technical achievement. Local resident Florah Davis described the hardship previously faced by the community.

“Before, when the sea was high tide or flooding, our community suffered from access to schools, clinics, and going to market,” Ms Davis said. “But now we are lucky to have this suspension bridge. It will stay long and serve our people for their livelihood.”

Kukudu Cultural Performers. Photo: Tavuli News- Solomon Islands

The Kukudu bridge is part of a broader suite of PCDF-funded projects aimed at climate resilience in the Solomon Islands. By elevating the crossing and using modern engineering standards, the project intends to create long-term opportunities for the Western Province, ensuring that regional connectivity remains intact despite the increasing frequency of extreme weather events.

By Steven Kamoa

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