He studied at the Barcelona School of Architecture, from where he graduated as a qualified architect in 1892. He worked mainly in Vilafranca del Penedès, although he lived in Barcelona during the last years of his life.
Almost as soon as he had graduated, in 1893 he was appointed municipal architect of Vilafranca del Penedès, a post he held until 1904 and which he took up again a few years later between 1910 and 1918. He produced a large part of the town's urban development plans, although he also received many commissions from the local bourgeoisie.
His early work, up until 1904, adheres to the historicist trends, although from the outset he was already using decorative features from the Modernista current, such as in Casa Isidre Hill i Boada (1900; Sant Joan, 10, Vilafranca del Penedès). Over the following years Modernista language gradually made itself more prominent in his work, particularly on the façades, with undulating shapes, bull's eyes and mouldings, and plentiful floral decoration, so that he became the representative of Modernisme in Vilafranca. Examples of this properly Modernista production are the Magí Figures i Galofré store (1904; General Prim, 12, Vilafranca del Penedès), Casa Fortuny (Rambla de Nostra Senyora, 11-13, Vilafranca del Penedès) and Casa Miró Inglada (Rambla de Nostra Senyora, 47, Vilafranca del Penedès).
He was actively involved in the political life of Vilafranca, becoming a town councillor in 1905 and mayor for a year in 1909.