Sure, give me the 40,000 i was quoted for a culvert and I'll be glad to pay a professional to do it.
btw, lot next door had a house that was just completed. They paid 50,000 for their fire marshal approved / engineered culvert and got a discount because they heavy equipment was there already to clear the land and dig the basement to build the house.
Dan
$40k for a 20 ft stick of 24 inch HDPE culvert with three feet of fill is great, for the contractor. Seriously that’s about a a $10k job all day long in my field. That includes the fill and compacting it and probably a six inch thick gravel surface.
20 ft of 24” culvert at $250ft, installed.
60 cy of fill, 7 ea 10 yd truck loads at $300 each
Equipment (exc, loader, dozer, only need one), one 8 hour day at $300/hr (w/ operator)
20 tons of gravel (one 10 yd truck load) at $35/cy, placed.
Did your contractor give you anything remotely like that? Or are you looking at a six ft diameter culvert?
But, bridges are cooler.
I see we have more bridge engineers on this site than I would have thought.
Anyhow, you really need to be thinking about connection details, how to connect beams to the foundations and the deck to the beams. You plan of 2x8 or 2x10 will get you there. But think about how to secure the 2x to the beams. Also, you’ve got a vertical grade issue on the low end, I’d try to do that with all little fill as possible.
The idea of transverse steel members to keep the beams parallel is good, as is the high/low vertical staggering of those members. Connecting the beams I in the middle is not great and connecting with anything other than welding or structural gusset plates and structural bolts is not good. I kind of like the railroad tie decking idea, hell for stout. Here in the PNW the cheap used ties are $25 each. You’d have to think on connection details again.
BTW the least expensive, simplest highway bridge over here is roughly $300/s.f. of deck surface area out the door. But obviously built much differently than what you’ve got going on.