Newly constructed concrete bridge spanning waterway in rural Ghana connecting previously isolated communities

Ghana Bridge Completed in 90 Days After 30-Year Wait

✨ Faith Restored

A rural Ghanaian community that spent three decades cut off by floodwaters every rainy season now has a sturdy bridge built in just three months. The Aworano Bridge is ending generations of isolation and opening pathways to healthcare, markets, and hope.

For 30 years, residents of Aworano, Jama, and Mesidan watched the same heartbreaking scene unfold each rainy season: roads disappearing under water, bridges washing away, and their entire world shrinking to the boundaries of their flood-trapped villages.

Farmers watched produce rot because they couldn't reach markets. Sick people couldn't get to clinics. Children missed school for weeks at a time.

"We shouted until we lost our voices," the local Assemblyman told JoyNews. "Our cars became boats in the rainy season. We were stranded in our own land."

Then three months ago, something changed. Elizabeth Ofosu-Adjare, Member of Parliament for Techiman North and Minister for Trade, visited the communities and made a promise. Unlike the decades of empty words before, construction crews arrived within days.

Contractor M. Gyebi and his team completed what seemed impossible: a full bridge and extensive drainage system in just 90 days. The official timeline for the project was 18 to 24 months, but the first phase raced ahead of schedule.

Ghana Bridge Completed in 90 Days After 30-Year Wait

"We are not just hearing promises; we are touching the results," said the Chief of Jama. "The speed has surprised us all."

During a recent surprise visit, the MP walked across the completed bridge with cheering residents. She praised the engineering team and shared the community's joy at seeing concrete results after three decades of waiting.

The Ripple Effect

The bridge means more than dry roads during rainy season. Farmers can now reliably transport crops to market year-round. Families can reach healthcare facilities in emergencies. Students won't miss weeks of school every time it rains.

The economic impact reaches beyond these three villages. The new road network connects multiple communities in Techiman North, creating reliable trade routes where none existed before.

The MP announced plans to plant trees along the new roads, combining infrastructure development with climate action. The Regional Manager for Bono East Feeder Roads confirmed the work exceeds quality standards despite the remarkable speed.

After 30 years of broken promises, the people of Techiman North are walking across solid ground toward a future they're building for themselves.

Based on reporting by Myjoyonline Ghana

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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