You're right about maintenance costs, but have you looked up the prices of structural grade steel in the last decade? After shipping, permits, securing enough qualified union steelworkers, etc. etc. it's easily over 3-times the cost of on-site or off-site prestressed concrete fabrication. Prestressed concrete is the popular standard now in everything from bridges to hospitals.
For a while the price was rising so steeply that contractors would buy all the steel they would need years in advance (as soon as they could get their first bid documents) and let it sit. This caused problems in itself because beams ordered from the foundry 2-3 years ago may not be needed or have been modified during the permiting or VE process. Even on conrete jobs they can't leave the exposed or stock rebar unsecure these days else scrappers will come by and pinch it all in a second.
He doesn't because I'll tell you right now and up-front he's so wrong in today's market it's not funny.
Please, just stop or present to us your sources. Yes, it's apears to be structuraly less mass (a few steel beams instead of slabs, beams and blocks of concrete) , but far from effecient or economic.
Again, I said steel bridges trump concrete bridges when it comes to structural efficiency. If you'd bother to read, you could see that I said I don't know which would be ahead for the life cycle economics.
But again for you:
1. There is no such thing as one type fits all, especially when it comes to bridges
2. Every type of bridge design has its optimal span length which vary by the type. Out of that optimum it will most likely be less efficient then type within the range.
3. The above will influence type selection
4. Price of the material and fabrication is only one aspect of life-cycle economics of a bridge
5. At given span length of 400-500 ft, and other data given by Grizz, best choices are a)over-deck steel truss b) segmental pre-stressed concrete (mentioned in one of my previous posts)
6. No engineer worth his salt will tell you which is more economical without 'case by case' life-cycle cost analysis (everything else is just a guess).
PS
my sources:
Publications of American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
Issues of The Journal of Structural Engineering by ASCE
Issues of The Practice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction by ASCE
Issues of The Journal of Management in Engineering by ASCE
Publications of American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI)
Publications of American Concrete Institute (ACI)
Publications of American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC)