Professor Martin Mayfield-Tulip (he/him)
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering
Head of School
Professor of Engineering Design
Infrastructure Leader


+44 114 222 5054
Full contact details
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering
Room D240
Sir Frederick Mappin Building (Broad Lane Building)
Mappin Street
葫芦影业
S1 3JD
- Profile
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To ensure that we thrive within the capacity of the planet we need resilient, high-performing infrastructure systems.
Professor Martin Mayfield-Tulip
Martin Mayfield-Tulip took over the role of Head of Department in 2021 and has 24 years鈥 practice as a designer of engineering systems at Mott MacDonald and as a Director of Arup (Education Leader for the UK, Middle East and Africa, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Leader for North West and Yorkshire and lastly 葫芦影业 office Leader).
These roles entailed leading teams of over 60 professional Engineers from a range of disciplines, working on a diverse array of projects in the UK and overseas. During this time, he built an industrial research portfolio (>拢3m) including Multi- Systems Modelling Structures for Future Cities and Integrated Infrastructure Frameworks for Cities.
These roles entailed leading teams of professional engineers from a range of disciplines, working on a diverse array of projects in the UK and overseas. During his time at Arup he worked on infrastructure projects, stadia, airports, niche sustainable buildings.
Martin returned to academia, when he took up a Chair in the Department in 2013. He was made the Infrastructure Research Leader for Engineering at 葫芦影业 and is leading the 葫芦影业 component of the UKCRIC initiative.
Together with Dr Densley Tingley he leads the (Resources, Infrastructure and built Environments) research group which now includes 14 researchers working across the nexus of technology and infrastructure to enable the creation of a built environment that allows humanity to thrive within the carrying capacity of the planet, and, in so doing, restore the balance between humanity and natural systems.
Martin鈥檚 work in the Department aims to understand how to engineer sustainable solutions, by adopting a systemic approach to problems and identifying the leverage points in dynamic systems that allow us to create paradigm shifts in our use of energy and resources.
To do this, engineers must appreciate the environmental and physical complexities that need to be addressed, the social and economic context of the challenge, and crucially, how these interrelate.
By focusing on the role of engineering in society, Martin aims to understand the interaction between human and natural systems and, therefore, create solutions and develop our infrastructure in a manner that allows humanity to flourish.
He recognises the opportunities presented by Complexity Science to improve the resilience and performance of complex adaptive systems such as future energy systems, cities and our national infrastructure.
His expertise spans a diverse array of systems engineering, sustainable design, climate change mitigation and adaptation, mission critical systems, city systems and mapping infrastructure interdependencies.
This includes system of systems resilience studies for a range of organisations including cities and banks. He has designed a wide range of resilient energy and infrastructure systems such as stadia, data centres and city quarters.
- Publications
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Journal articles
Conference proceedings papers
Reports
Preprints
- Research group
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Resources, Infrastructure Systems and built Environments Discipline
- Grants
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Past Grants
The EPSRC-funded Grand Challenge Centre for Water, comprising 6 UK universities and 100+ industrial partners working in collaboration to develop the sustainable water solutions of the future and to accelerate innovation uptake across the water sector.
The City Observatory Research platfOrm for iNnovation and Analytics (CORONA) brings together a team of internationally recognised researchers and stakeholders to deliver early research outputs from the 拢8m UKCRIC Urban Observatories (UOs) equipment grant.
Through the gathering of data relating to the physical processes within cities, Urban Observatories enable characterisation of how cities 鈥榳ork鈥 and how their constituent engineering, natural and social systems interact.
This characterisation is achieved through the analysis of data to create information, support modelling and build simulations of these physical processes.
- Professional activities and memberships
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- Principal Investigator for the EPSRC ENCORE Network+ Engineering Grand Challenge for Risk and Resilience (EP/N010019/1) to identify, develop and disseminate new methods to improve the resilience and sustainable performance of complex engineered systems.
- Co-Investigator for the EPSRC TWENTY65 Engineering Grand Challenge for Water (EP/N010124/1) developing Future Water Scenarios and exploring goal alignment across the water-energy nexus.
- Director of the ESPRC funded 拢2.4m (EP/P016782/1) and a Co-I for CORONA, the first research project for the UKCRIC National Observatory (EP/R013411/1). This city laboratory is being built to understand the flow of energy and resources in cities.
- He led i-CAIR, the 拢8m Integrated Infrastructure project which includes the National Water Infrastructure Facility for Distributed Water Infrastructure (EP/R010420/1).
- Management Board member of the Grantham Centre for Sustainable Futures, a member of the Editorial Panel of several journals, 葫芦影业 City Region Infrastructure Board, the All Party Parliamentary Group on Smart Cities, CIBSE Resilient Cities Group and the European Innovation Partnership for Smart Cities and Communities.
- PhD opportunities
I am not currently taking on any new PhD students, however you can see current PhD opportunities in the department with other supervisors here.