Up until the late 1990s Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company would only install 277Y480 volts for large commercial buildings. For some reason, factories and machine shops could only get 240 ungrounded, 480 ungrounded, and 120/240 volts single phase grounded.
When CEI mergered with Ohio Edison to form First Energy the dictate from Akron, Ohio was that all new 3-phase services had to be 4-wire solidly grounded or be convertible from corner grounded to 4-wire wye or delta. New 3-phase meter sockets have to be form 16s or 9s.
In Shaker Heights, Ohio CEI has separate 4,400 volt distribution circuits for motors and lights so that the power quality problems from apartment elevators will not mess up the lights. This is even for apartment buildings that are close to the substation that steps down from 34,500 volts to 4,400 volts.
There is also an air compressor testing shop in Akron, Ohio that knocks out all of the HID bulbs, streetlights, cash registers and computers every time they test a 50 HP or larger air compressor, even if the unit uses wye-delta starting. The wires on the primary circuit are too small and First Energy wants something like $15,000 to run a tap off of the 13,200Y23,000 industrial distribution that is 1 block away.
Up here in Cleveland we still have a lot of people who are 30 or 40 years behind on National Electrical Code. In 2004 somebody in Independence, Ohio put in a 277Y480 volt service with both the attachment insulators and the splices above the weatherheads. The requirement for the splices and point of attachment below the weatherheads was enacted in 1978 or 1981 ton prevent stranded conductor from acting as a poor excuse for a water hose. When I get the pictures developed I wil post them on my website and let you know.
Getting back to the original topic, the efficiency of modern capacitor start capacitor run motors is very much better than 30 years ago so the cost balance is in favor of single phase unless you use lots of juice or it is right out front on the street. You can also get static and rotary phase conveters that use a tapped autotransformer to match the amount of phase conversion to the load.
You can also get a combination static phase converter/ Harmonic filter from Mirus International that will run a 3-phase input vbariable frequency drive off of single phase power with harmonics equivalent to an 18 pulse rectifier.
Also, Marwell makes 2 different meter socket adapters that will allow you to build a service that is single phase upgradeable to 4-wire delta or 4-wire wye when your load grows. One of those adapters and well as 2 other can be used to build a service that is 3-wire open delta upgradable to 4-wire wye.