There is a concern with worldwide deterioration of highway bridges, particularly reinforced concrete. The advantages of fiber reinforced plastic (FRP) composites over conventional materials motivate their use in highway bridges for rehabilitation and replacement of structures. In this paper, a systematic approach for analysis and design of all FRP deck/stringer bridges is presented. The analyses of structural components cover: (1) constituent materials and ply properties, (2) laminated panel engineering properties, (3) stringer stiffness properties, and (4) apparent stiffnesses for composite cellular decks and their equivalent orthotropic material properties. To verify the accuracy of orthotropic material properties, an actual deck is experimentally tested and analyzed by a finite element model. For design analysis of FRP deck/stringer bridge systems, an approximate series solution for orthotropic plates, including first-order shear deformation, is applied to develop simplified design equations, which account for load distribution factors under various loading cases. An FRP deck fabricated by bonding side-by-side box beams is transversely attached to FRP wide-flange beams and tested as a deck/stringer bridge system. The bridge systems are tested under static loads for various load conditions, and the experimental results are correlated with those by an approximate series solution and a finite element model. The present simplified design analysis procedures can be used to develop new efficient FRP sections and to design FRP highway bridge decks and deck/stringer systems, as shown by an illustrative design example. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.