Bruce Redman Becker

CFA Service: 2024–present
Bruce Redman Becker

Bruce Redman Becker, FAIA, LEED AP, is president of Becker + Becker, an integrated sustainable architecture and development firm in Westport, Connecticut.  

Becker designs buildings that have a transformative social and environmental value.  His work includes the rehabilitation of the former Bank of America tower in Hartford into a 285-unit LEED Platinum-rated mixed-income community; the design and development of 360 State Street in New Haven, which redeveloped a long-vacant urban site into a 500-unit mixed-income community and cooperative grocery store; and the adaptive reuse of the historic Wauregan Hotel in Norwich, Connecticut, creating 70 units of affordable housing and retail shops.  His firm also restored the historic Octagon tower on New York City’s Roosevelt Island to create a 500-unit mixed-income community and waterfront park.  Most recently, Becker completed the rehabilitation of the iconic Pirelli Building in New Haven, designed by Marcel Breuer, into Hotel Marcel—a 165-room boutique hotel that uses no fossil fuels and is the first Passive House Institute-certified hotel in the United States. 

Becker is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, a LEED Accredited Professional, and a Certified Passive House Designer.  He was a contributing author for the AIA Handbook of Professional Practice on the architect as developer in project delivery.  He was a founding director of the Connecticut Renewable Energy and Efficiency Business Association and served as the chair of the Harlem School of the Arts; he currently chairs the Electric Vehicle Club of Connecticut.  He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in American Studies and Fine Arts from Amherst College, and his Master of Business Administration and Master of Architecture degrees from Yale University.  He is a frequent lecturer and design critic at the Yale School of Architecture and is a frequent speaker at architecture, historic preservation, and sustainable development industry events.