Podcast: How to Design the Acoustics of a Concert Hall

In the fourth episode in our series on sound, architectural acoustics expert and educator Michael Ermann and CertainTeed Architectural national sales manager Steve Udolph share the secrets of how to ensure optimal acoustics in a concert hall.

2 MIN READ

This is the fourth episode in our podcast series helping architects better understand acoustics. If you haven’t heard the first three episodes yet, make sure to go back and listen to “How Can Architects Better Understand Sound?,” “Unpacking the Latest Trends in Architectural Acoustics,” and “5 Mistakes to Avoid When Designing an Acoustic Space.”

In the previous episode of our series on the architecture of sound, we talked to Michael Ermann, a licensed architect, expert on architectural acoustics, and professor at Virginia Tech’s School of Architecture, and Steve Udolph, the national sales manager for CertainTeed Architectural, about five common mistakes designers make when planning an acoustic space and how to avoid them. In this episode, our experts examine the ins and outs of designing a concert hall for the best possible acoustics.

This podcast is underwritten by CertainTeed Architectural.

Click here to see more of ARCHITECT’s acoustics-related coverage.

Michael Ermann

Michael Ermann

Michael Ermann is a full tenured professor at Virginia Tech’s School of Architecture where he teaches design studio, environmental building systems, and both teaches and researches architectural acoustics. Professor Ermann has taught acoustics to more than 1,500 architecture students at Virginia Tech and, as continuing education, to more than 15,000 practicing architects, including 31 three-day seminars for American Institute of Architects chapters in New York, Washington, D.C., Miami, Houston, Los Angeles, Raleigh, New Orleans, New Mexico, and Alaska. He has authored or co-authored eight peer-reviewed journal papers in acoustics and presented more than 25 papers in that field. In the last 15 years, Professor Ermann has won five school awards for teaching, research, outreach, and creative achievement. He wrote Architectural Acoustics Illustrated (Wiley, 2015), which translates the discipline of acoustics into the graphic language of architecture. For this effort he earned the Virginia Prize for Design Research and Scholarship (the second time he won that award). Google “architectural acoustics” (click on the video tab) and his work will come up first in your feed throughout the English-speaking world. His YouTube channel enjoys more than 6 million views and more than 30,000 subscribers. In 2019, AIA Virginia conferred to him the Award for Distinguished Achievement for his life’s work as an educator. A licensed architect, last year he won an international Architizer A+ first place award for the Bubble Wrap House he designed and lives in.

Steve Udolph

Steve Udolph

Steve Udolph is a national sales manager for CertainTeed Architectural, covering a wide range of standard and custom product collections in felt, wood, metal, fiberglass, and more. It’s a natural fit for Steve, who has spent his entire career in the interior specialties business, putting his dual degrees in marketing and management information systems to work in field that thrives on design, messaging, and technology.

About the Author

Paul Makovsky

Paul Makovsky is editor-in-chief of ARCHITECT.

Paul Makovsky

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