Georgia Tech College of ArchitecturePlanning

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Technology SquareDr. Brian Stone

Associate Professor Brian Stone, Ph.D.

Ph.D., City and Regional Planning, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2001.
M.E.M. (Environmental Management), Duke University, 1996
B.A., English, Duke University, 1993.


CONTACT DR. STONE

Office: 204 Old Architecture
Phone: 404.894.6488 
Fax: 404.894.1628
E-mail

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Brian Stone teaches in the areas of urban environmental management and integrated land use and transportation planning.

Stone's program of research is focused on the spatial drivers of urban environmental phenomena, with an emphasis on climate change and air quality. Most recently, he received a grant from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to measure the influence of urban development patterns on climate change and excessive heat events in large U.S. cities. Through a project funded by the U.S. EPA, Stone is assessing the impacts of smart growth and vehicle fleet hybridization on greenhouse gas emissions by the year 2050, as well as the implications of alternative development patterns for future vehicle use and air pollution. Stone's work has been featured on National Public Radio, CNN, and Georgia Public Broadcasting. 

Stone has taught in the areas of urban environmental planning, urban ecology, land use and transportation planning, and sustainable transport planning, and has instructed studio courses on transit oriented development, smart growth audits, and ecological master plans. Within the City and Regional Planning program, he is currently teaching CP 8823: Urban Environmental Planning and Design and CP 6331: Land Use and Transportation Interactions.

Prior to joining the faculty in 2005, Stone taught in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning and the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has worked as a planning consultant and served on the board of a number of non-profit organizations, including the Partnership for a Smog Free Georgia, the UW Aldo Leopold Arboretum, and the Olmsted Linear Park Alliance.