Martin Gold University of Florida

Martin Gold

Associate Professor

mgold@ufl.edu 352-294-1474
  • Gainesville FL UNITED STATES
  • College of Design Construction and Planning

Martin Gold researches the interrelationships among architecture, ecology, culture and resource stewardship at urban and residential scales.

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Biography

Martin Gold has over 25 years of engagement in architectural design, teaching and research. His work focuses on the interrelationships among architecture, ecology, culture and resource stewardship at urban and residential scales. Martin is a member of the doctoral research faculty, supervises doctoral and master degree seeking students and leads design studios and lecture courses. Martin's work and publications explore design and sustainable living in coastal communities underpinned by the critical need for integrating resiliency, mobility and aesthetics toward emergent urban forms. Martin currently leads funded research-based design projects and is a founding member of the Florida Resilient Community Initiative (FRCI) at the College of Design, Construction and Planning and serves as the president of the national consortium of academic programs Architecture + Construction Alliance (A+CA). Martin practices architecture as the principal of a small award-winning architecture firm, is a registered architect in Florida, holds an NCARB certification and is a fellow of the American Institute of Architects.

Areas of Expertise

Ecological Planning
Environmental Technology in Buildings
Sustainable Architecture

Articles

An architectural investigation of mitigating noise to improve speech intelligibility in an open studio environment

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

Christopher W. Kania, et. al

2022-12-02

This research project proposes a series of solutions to mitigate noise and improve speech intelligibility within an open architectural studio environment. Open studio environments pose a unique challenge compared to conventional open office environments. In addition to typical sources of noise found in open offices, such as conversation between co-workers, open studios contain noise generating equipment, such as plotters, 3-D printers and laser cutters.

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