Adif Launches €102M Tunnel Safety Tender in Madrid
Adif launched a €102.54 million tender to modernize tunnel safety and evacuation systems across four tunnels on Madrid’s C-5 commuter line, which carries 72 million passengers annually.

MADRID, SPAIN – Spain’s railway infrastructure manager Adif opened a EUR 102.54 million tender on 11 June 2025 for tunnel adaptation and modernization along Madrid’s C-5 urban rail line. The contract covers civil engineering modifications and installation of new safety, evacuation, lighting, and communications systems across the Atocha–Las Águilas, Méndez Álvaro, Doce de Octubre, and Puente Alcocer tunnels. This procurement forms part of a EUR 1.35 billion overall C-5 modernization programme, with EUR 650 million allocated directly to Adif-led infrastructure works.
What Does This Contract Cover?
Twelve new emergency exits, safety zones, and additional ventilation systems will be constructed in the Atocha–Las Águilas tunnel alone, while Méndez Álvaro gains one new emergency exit and multiple refuge areas, and the Doce de Octubre and Puente Alcocer tunnels receive new safety areas and evacuation routes. All four tunnels will be outfitted with LED lighting, upgraded communications networks, intrusion detection, CCTV surveillance, fire hydrants, and hardened evacuation infrastructure. The contract is structured as an integrated delivery model, coordinating civil engineering and safety system installation simultaneously to compress implementation time and eliminate phase conflicts.
Key Contract Data
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Contract Name | C-5 Line Tunnel Adaptation and Modernization (Atocha–Las Águilas, Méndez Álvaro, Doce de Octubre, Puente Alcocer) |
| Total Value | EUR 102.54 million |
| Parties Involved | Adif (procuring entity); bidders not yet disclosed |
| Timeline / Completion | Not disclosed at tender stage |
| Country / Corridor | Spain / Madrid C-5 commuter line (Atocha–Móstoles-El Soto corridor) |
How Does This Compare to Similar Contracts?
This EUR 102.54 million tunnel safety contract represents approximately 15.8% of Adif’s EUR 650 million infrastructure allocation within the broader C-5 modernization programme. In April 2025, Adif separately tendered modern signalling systems for a section of the same C-5 line, signalling a phased, multi-contract procurement strategy rather than a single mega-award. By comparison, the complete EUR 1.35 billion C-5 overhaul — spanning infrastructure, rolling stock acquisition, and workshop modernization — mirrors the scale of Transport for London’s Four Lines Modernisation programme, which carried an estimated GBP 5.4 billion budget across tunnelling, signalling, and depot works (Source: TfL, 2023). Adif’s adoption of an integrated delivery model for this tunnel package aligns with procurement trends observed across EU-funded urban rail projects, where simultaneous civil and systems coordination is increasingly mandated to reduce total programme duration. The availability of EU budget support for regional connectivity projects, actively advocated by Spain’s rail sector in 2025, provides critical co-financing context for tenders of this magnitude (Source: Global Railway Review, 2025).
Note: The specific bidding entities, evaluation criteria weighting, and contract award date were not publicly available at time of publication.
Editor’s Analysis
Adif’s decision to package tunnel safety works into a EUR 102.54 million integrated contract — rather than splitting civil and systems scopes — suggests a procurement team prioritising delivery speed and interface risk reduction over maximum bidder pool breadth. The C-5 line’s 72 million annual passenger volume places it among Europe’s highest-ridership commuter routes, meaning any safety gap carries outsized operational and reputational risk for both Adif and Renfe Operadora. The April signalling tender, this tunnel safety contract, and the residual EUR 700 million earmarked for rolling stock and workshops collectively indicate that Adif is executing a sequenced, multi-year corridor upgrade that will likely serve as a procurement template for Madrid’s other Cercanías lines. Spain’s concurrent push for EU co-financing of regional rail connectivity places the C-5 programme within a broader national strategy to leverage Brussels funding instruments for urban mobility infrastructure (Source: Global Railway Review, 2025).
FAQ
Q: Which tunnels are being upgraded under this EUR 102.54 million tender?
A: The contract covers four tunnels on Madrid’s C-5 commuter line: Atocha–Las Águilas, Méndez Álvaro, Doce de Octubre, and Puente Alcocer.
Q: Will C-5 train services be suspended during the tunnel works?
A: No. Adif has specified that all civil engineering and systems installation will proceed without disrupting train service on the C-5 line.
Q: How does this tender relate to the overall C-5 line modernization programme?
A: This EUR 102.54 million tunnel safety contract is one component of a EUR 1.35 billion total programme, of which EUR 650 million is allocated to Adif-led infrastructure works, with the remainder directed to rolling stock and workshop upgrades.




