President Oscar Arias’s recent visit to Puntarenas highlights the excitement surrounding the opening of the Costanera Highway which will connect San Jose to the beaches in 50 minutes, and every area in between in a fraction of the time we are all accustomed to. The fact that it will open in the height of the travel season will be a boon for the Costa Rican economy and vacation travelers alike. In Atenas, where we are located, we expect to see many city dwellers consider moving out to the country now that they can commute to the city in 20 minutes. Let’s see what this will do to home prices. But for those considering a safe place to purchase land or a home, Atenas will be the one Central Valley town that truly benefits, as we have an exit from the highway that leads right into the town center.
The new autopista a Caldera will be inaugurated on January 27th, one week before the national elections, Costa Rican president, Oscar Arias, announced in Puntarenas on Saturday.
“For the first time I made it here (Puntarenas) in 50 minutes by way of the new highway”, Arias told a crowd during a tour of the Pacific port town.
The section between Santa Ana and Orotina of the new San José – Caldera highway that is not yet open to the public, had been scheduled to be open in March, pushed up from the original June opening date when construction commenced two years ago.
However, advances in the work enable it open early.
President Arias called the new highway a “gift to Puntarenses”, saying that Costa Rica has waited almost 40 years for this highway to become a reality, for the port city to have easy and fast access to San José and vice-versa.
The new road allows travel between La Sabana on the west side of San José to Caldera, south of Puntarenas, in less than 45 minutes. Currently it takes between 90 and 120 minutes to make the same trip.
The savings in time is because the highway cuts through the mountains, eliminating the steep climbs and drops on the current routes, as well the slowdown in traffic caused by big trucks and buses.
The sections between San José and Santa Ana and Orotina and Caldera have been open since last year, remaining was the middle portion.
The cost of tolls to travel the 77 kilometers of the new highway, from end to end, is about ¢1.500 colones each way for passenger vehicles and motorcycles, more for heavy trucks and buses.
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