← Back to News
ports

Port of Rotterdam Access Route A15 Faces Critical Maintenance; Weekend Closures Begin This Week

By MGN Maritime JournalistMarch 30, 2026 at 04:01 PM

Rijkswaterstaat begins multi-month resurfacing of the A15 highway serving Europe's largest port, with weekend closures starting March 20 adding delays to already-stressed container networks.

**Rotterdam — Port Infrastructure** The Port of Rotterdam is preparing for extended road maintenance that will restrict access to Europe's largest container terminal via the critical A15 highway, with the first major closure beginning this weekend. Rijkswaterstaat, the Dutch road authority, is replacing deteriorating tarmac on the A15 between Maasvlakte—home to the port's primary container facilities—and Vaanplein through May 2026, with additional work scheduled for September and October. The agency cited increasing risk of emergency repairs as justification for the sustained intervention. The first closure runs from 21:00 hours Friday, March 20 through 05:00 Monday, March 23, affecting the main carriageway toward Europoort and Maasvlakte between the Spijkenisse exit and the Havens 4100-5200 entry. Additional weekend and holiday closures are scheduled for April 10-13, April 17-20, and May 8-11, each forcing traffic diversions with expected delays of up to 30 minutes depending on the affected section. **Why It Matters** The A15 is the primary inland transport corridor for the Port of Rotterdam's container operations. The port handled 14.7 million TEUs in 2024 and serves as Europe's busiest gateway for intercontinental container traffic. Extended travel times on the sole major access route will compress dwell times, reduce trucking capacity to inland terminals, and increase logistics costs across the continent's primary container supply chain. The timing compounds existing supply chain stress. Maersk announced this week that severe winter weather in the Western Mediterranean since mid-January has caused port congestions and elevated yard density at terminals serving the SAMBA service linking East Coast South America to Europe. The carrier implemented contingency port omissions to absorb delays and recover schedule reliability—a common mitigation when terminal infrastructure cannot keep pace with vessel arrival rates. Port of Rotterdam maintains routine maintenance schedules during the A15 work, limiting disruption to container handling, but truck-dependent inland distribution will absorb the full impact of extended road access times. **Scope and Schedule** Rijkswaterstaat is performing work outside peak business hours—Friday evenings through Monday mornings and during holiday periods—to limit disruption to weekday port operations. However, the cumulative effect of five separate weekend closures over 10 weeks will compress capacity and increase congestion on alternate routes. The authority did not announce completion dates for the replacement program beyond May 2026, suggesting additional phases may follow the September-October 2026 maintenance window. Road infrastructure renewal of this scope typically signals systemic deterioration, implying future closures are likely. **Mitigation** Port stakeholders and logistics providers should plan contingency capacity on alternative arrival routes—primarily the A7 and A12 via Amsterdam and Utrecht—and consider advancing or deferring container pickups to avoid peak closure windows. Inland terminals and barge operators may see temporary demand spikes during closure periods as trucking shifts to alternate logistics modes.
#port-of-rotterdam#infrastructure#container-shipping#supply-chain#netherlands#a15-highway#maersk#mediterranean

Related Articles