Carlos Martín
Carlos Martín was Director of the Remodeling Futures Program and a Lecturer at the Graduate School of Design. He has over 25 years of experience researching housing technology and the physical quality of existing homes. Dr. Martín's research on housing adaptation to climate change, housing decarbonization, disaster mitigation and recovery, substandard housing, construction innovation, and the construction workforce connects the bricks-and-mortar of existing housing to its social outcomes.
Carlos came to the Center from the Urban Institute, where he was a senior fellow. Previously, he was an assistant staff vice president for construction codes and standards at the National Association of Home Builders, SRP professor for energy and the environment at Arizona State University, and coordinator for the US Department of Housing and Urban Development's Partnership for Advancing Technology in Housing. Carlos is a fellow at the Brookings Institution and serves on several National Academy of Science committees. He has previously served on advisory boards for HUD, EPA, and FEMA.
Carlos received his BSAD in architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his MEng and PhD degrees in civil and environmental engineering from Stanford University.
By This Author
Remodeling Soars to New Heights, but Industry Faces Numerous Challenges
The Movement for Improving and Expanding Home Repair Programs Enters a New Era
Despite a Pandemic Remodeling Boom, Aging US Homes Require Additional Investment
How Do We Encourage Greater Flood Insurance in America?
Harnessing the IIJA’s Weatherization Assistance Program to Leave No Household in the Cold
Catalyzing a Movement to Produce Greater Public, Private, and Civil Resources to Improve Housing Conditions Through Home Repair Programs
Empowering Up, Powering Down: The Evolution, Effects, and Efforts to Digitize Energy Controls and Digitalize Energy Information in US Homes
How Do We Encourage Greater Flood Insurance Coverage in America?
Targeting Weatherization: Supporting Low-Income Renters in Multifamily Properties through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act’s Funding of the Weatherization Assistance Program and Beyond
The Potential for Supporting Low-Income Renters Through Transportation Spending Under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and Beyond
Connecting Americans to Prosperity: How Infrastructure Can Become More Equitable
Continued Gains Projected for Remodeling Amid Economic Uncertainty
Remodeling Soars to New Heights, but Industry Faces Numerous Challenges
Catalyzing a Movement to Produce Greater Public, Private, and Civil Resources to Improve Housing Conditions Through Home Repair Programs
The Movement for Improving and Expanding Home Repair Programs Enters a New Era
Empowering Up, Powering Down: The Evolution, Effects, and Efforts to Digitize Energy Controls and Digitalize Energy Information in US Homes