
Transport Minister Alexis Vafeadis confirmed on 2 May that Cyprus will press ahead with the long-delayed €1.2-billion redevelopment of Larnaca’s marina and adjacent commercial port, but will now execute the two components in parallel rather than as a single concession. The shift follows last year’s collapse of negotiations with Israel’s Kition Ocean Holdings, which had struggled to raise financing under the original design-build-operate contract. The revised model sees the Cyprus Ports Authority leading the port upgrade—expanding break-waters, deepening berths to 15 metres and installing a Schengen-compliant passenger-terminal—while a yet-to-be-tendered private entity will build the 600-berth leisure marina and waterfront real-estate complex. Officials say separating the schemes reduces execution risk and allows the state to draw on €350 million in EU Recovery-Fund money earmarked for sustainable transport. For mobility stakeholders the announcement matters on several fronts. First, cruise lines using Larnaca as a turnaround port will gain a dedicated terminal with automated border-gates by 2029, cutting immigration-processing times.
For passengers, crew and newly arriving expats keen to have their paperwork sorted before docking, VisaHQ’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) offers a fast, online way to check visa requirements, submit applications and track approvals—helping both individual travellers and corporate mobility teams streamline entry as the island readies its modernised seaport.
Second, the port upgrade is expected to divert some Ro-Ro freight away from Limassol, easing congestion and reducing truck-queuing times for inbound corporate relocations. Real-estate consultants note that serviced apartments planned along the marina promenade will add much-needed short-stay inventory for assignees waiting on residency permits. However, relocation budgets should factor in construction noise and temporary traffic diversions around Dekelia Road beginning this autumn. Vafeadis stressed that the 20-year wait for a modern gateway “is finally ending”, but labour unions warn that decoupling may dilute private-sector accountability. Tender documents for the marina concession are due by September.
For passengers, crew and newly arriving expats keen to have their paperwork sorted before docking, VisaHQ’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) offers a fast, online way to check visa requirements, submit applications and track approvals—helping both individual travellers and corporate mobility teams streamline entry as the island readies its modernised seaport.
Second, the port upgrade is expected to divert some Ro-Ro freight away from Limassol, easing congestion and reducing truck-queuing times for inbound corporate relocations. Real-estate consultants note that serviced apartments planned along the marina promenade will add much-needed short-stay inventory for assignees waiting on residency permits. However, relocation budgets should factor in construction noise and temporary traffic diversions around Dekelia Road beginning this autumn. Vafeadis stressed that the 20-year wait for a modern gateway “is finally ending”, but labour unions warn that decoupling may dilute private-sector accountability. Tender documents for the marina concession are due by September.