A graduate of the Lviv Polytechnic in 1882, a member of the Polytechnic Society. He worked in the architecture department of the Lviv City Council. Together with Yulian Tsibulskyi, they founded an architectural and design bureau, which oversaw construction works in particular (in particular, the building of the main post office on Slovackoho street and the Greek-Catholic seminary on Kopernyka street). He was the president of the Union of Architects in Lviv. The author of a number of buildings built in the eclectic style, in particular the hospital buildings of the Bilinsky Foundation on Smal-Stotskoho St. (1891) and the school for the blind on Franka St. (1900) and the Ratslavytska Panorama pavilion for the National Exhibition in Lviv (1894). In the Art Nouveau style, he designed tenement houses at 124-132 Franka St. (1907)
