How are county engineers working to upgrade local infrastructure?

According to the National Association of County Engineers, local roads account for 75 percent of the nations highways and roads (about 2.93 million miles). Counties manage about 1.74 million miles of those roads, while cities and townships oversee another 1.19 million miles. Counties also own 219,000 bridges (40% of the nation’s bridges) and operate one-third of the nation’s transit systems.

The National Highway Bridge Replacement and Rehabilitation Program (HBRRP) sufficiency ratings indicate that 31.9 percent of county bridges are considered structurally deficient and 11.5 percent functionally obsolete for a total of 43.4 percent in need of replacement or rehabilitation.

Brian Keierleber, P.E., has been the County Engineer in Buchanan County, Iowa since 1993, overseeing the maintenance and construction of 963 miles of county roads and 257 county bridges. In this video, Brian provides a perspective on how county engineers are working to upgrade the local infrastructure with sustainable steel solutions.

Learn more about Brian and Buchanan County’s use of steel to upgrade their local infrastructure:

Related Resources: Prefabricated Bridges

Minnesota LTPA Webinar 2025 Short Span steel Bridges

Steel Bridges for Smarter, Faster Construction – On-Demand Steel Bridge Video Series

This three-part on-demand video series covers integral abutments, simple for dead continuous for live designs and prefabricated bridge options.

Bridges of Franklin County: Why Missouri is Turning to Steel weathering steel short span bridge

Bridges of Franklin County: Why Missouri is Turning to Steel

Franklin County, Missouri, saved $283,000 by selecting steel over concrete for four short-span bridge projects, demonstrating that simplified designs combined with a competitive bidding process can deliver exceptional value, durability and long-term performance.

galvanized short span steel bridge mercer county pennsylvania

Pennsylvania County Selects Hot-Dip Galvanized Steel for Urgent Bridge Project

For a recent bridge replacement, Mercer County chose a hot-dip galvanized steel bridge to ensure a durable, cost-effective solution that could be delivered quickly and withstand a corrosive environment.