Cvg,
A duct bank can be very large say in a matrix of 12 by 10 and needs both strength and protection from concrete. Cable ducts must remain separated from each other throughout the service life and electric cables are expensive. The ducts are spaced very close to each other and need steel reinforcement to provide adequate strength.
Duct banks are seldom designed indivually but follow standard details proved over years of application.
Yigo and Dik
With all due respect I think the rebar quantity quoted by Dik is too high.
Chas Reynolds in "Reinforced concrete designer's handbook" 1957 and Charles E Reynolds & JC Steedman in 1974 " quoted the following:
The amount of steel in an ordinary reinforced concrete structure varies from 1 ton in 5 cu.yd. of concrete to 1 ton to 30 cu.yd. [265 to 44 kg/m3, 1 ton=1.016tonnes, 1 yd=0.9144m]
Warehouses, girder bridges, rectangular tanks, water tower,silo,circular bunkers,pits & pit head gears: 10 to 15 [132 to 89 kg/m3]
Factorties,residential buildings, retaining walls, culverts, swimming baths and open circular tanks: 15 to 20 [89 to 66 kg/m3]
Arch bridge, rectangular bunkers, pyramidal tanksin the ground and elevated conical tanks: 8 to 10 [166 to 132 kg/m3]
The 250 to 400 lb/cu yd is equivalent to 148 to 261 kg/m3 in metric term. I use 100kg/m3 as the starting threhold of congestion in rebar. I kept a reocrd of 4 power stations where 365000, 185000, 110000 and 6332 m3 of concrete were poured with 33600, 18000, 7000 and 482 tonnes rebar consumed giving an overall rebar content of 92, 97, 64 and 76 kg/m3 respectively. I have allowed people designing gas turbine foundations getting away with 75 kg/m3 rebar content.
I would be surprised if a duct bank needs more than 75kg in a m3 of concrete. My figure would be to go for 60kg/m3 or 100 lb/cu.yd, which is good enough for normal pad foundations, in the estimate.