
This Argentinean architect of Barcelona descent studied at the Barcelona School of Architecture, from which he graduated in 1900. Shortly afterwards returned to Argentina and qualified as an architect in Buenos Aires in 1903.
In Barcelona, he was responsible for Casa Pere Brias (1903; Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes, 439) and worked on various projects together with the architect V. Popurull. However, most of his production was in Buenos Aires, where he was regarded as a daring architect who introduced a new language akin to Art Nouveau, Nouveau, in contrast to the eclecticism which then predominated in the city. He mostly made blocks of flats, one at Calle Pte. Luis Saenz Peña, 274 (1913), and another at Calle Pichincha, 176 (1911), both in Buenos Aires.
Principal works
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