Suppose you built a series of self-supporting bridges out of carbon fiber or spectra that were only supported at their ends (which of course spread out and get bolted to concrete supports toward the sides. You make them slightly elevated so you drive up a slight ramp, across the bridge, and down the other side. Since they're vastly lighter than an existing bridge, they are transportable, and you lease them to companies and governments conducting criticial repairs to small, heavily traveled, existing bridges (specifically overpasses and such). You set the mobile high-tech bridge over the existing bridge, which it clears by about 8 feet to allow road crews to work underneath while traffic flows overhead on the carbon-fiber bridge. When work is completed the high-tech bridge gets moved to the next repair project.
Perhaps you move the temporary bridges with either airships or helicopters, maybe providing mounts so the rotor sections of several Sikorsky skycranes can be attached to booms on the sides to make a four or six-rotor flying bridge. Then you look at how many repair projects each size bridge can handle, the number of projects it can handle per year, the construction cost of the high-tech aerospace bridge, the transport and installation/removal costs, insurance, and how much contractors and cities would pay to lease one, per project.