Reinforced concrete buildings have better thermal and sound isolation. They are obviously more resistant to damage. Proof of this are Khruschev-era Soviet apartment blocks that are standing today.
A condo I lived in had brick walls between neighbors - definitely a huge plus compared to drywall in apartments where the neighbors can hear you turning on the tv at whisper sound levels.
> Reinforced concrete buildings have better thermal and sound isolation.
Thermal conductivity of materials are telling different story [1]. Polystyrene or mineral wool are good for insulation because they have low thermal conductivity 0.032 - 0.038 W/mK (these values are not exact obviously, you can also find mineral wool with values 0.033 not 0.038 but that is just detail). Timber here is 0.14 - 0.17 W/mK. We can find also concrete with 0.16 which is pretty low for concrete but unfortunately that is just aerated concrete which is different from more dense - reinforced one.
So for example in my home country (in central/eastern Europe) where we have Soviet apartment blocks and decide to insulate them we need to cover them with 30cm thick layer of mineral wool or polystyrene foam in order to meet current standards for thermal resistance. Most of them are already insulated at least decade now (unfortunately with just 10-20cm thin layer).
The last building I lived in was reinforced concrete. It was great, I definitely couldn't hear the neighbors, except I could still hear the people upstairs walking around in what sounded like tap shoes at 2am on Saturday nights. Some people just have more fun than me.
A condo I lived in had brick walls between neighbors - definitely a huge plus compared to drywall in apartments where the neighbors can hear you turning on the tv at whisper sound levels.