Charilaos Trikoupis was a 19th-century
prime minister of Greece who suggested building a bridge in the current location, but Greece's finances at the time didn't permit its construction. The bridge was planned in the mid-1990s and was built by a French-Greek consortium led by the
French group
Vinci SA which includes the Greek companies Hellenic Technodomiki-TEV,
J&P-Avax, Athena, Proodeftiki and Pantechniki. The consortium operates the bridge under concession under its ΓΕΦΥΡΑ or ΓαλλοΕλληνικός Φορέας Υπερθαλάσσιας ζεύξης Ρίου-Αντιρίου (
GEFYRA—Greek for "bridge"—or
GalloEllinikós Foréas Yperthalássias zéfxis Ríou-Antiríou, French-Greek Carrier of Oversea Connection of Rio–Antirrio) subsidiary. The suspension of the blue decorative lighting was announced by the company due to the ongoing electricity crisis in Europe but also to be in line with the company's environmental strategy. The bridge's carbon footprint has been reduced by 84.5% from 2015 to 2022. The lead
architect was Berdj Mikaelian. Site preparation and dredging began in July 1998, and construction of the massive supporting pylons in 2000. With these complete in 2003, work began on the traffic decks. Steel fabrication was undertaken by
Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company. On 21 May 2004 the main stage of construction was completed; only equipment (sidewalks, railings, etc.) and waterproofing remained to be installed. The total cost of the bridge was about €630 million, ==Inauguration==