He entered the French lycée in Poitiers, and later moved to the southern city of Nice, completing his studies there in 1917.
He then moved north and enrolled in the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures in Paris, where he was awarded a degree in architecture in 1921.
In the same year, he founded the Group of Architects of the Modern Direction, which together with him also included Milan Zloković, Jan Dubovi, and Dušan Babić.
[4] Over the course of his long career, he built more than 100 buildings, some of which are now landmarks of Belgrade and Serbia, namely the Cvijeta Zuzorić Pavilion.
[6][7] In 1950, he became a full professor at the Faculty of Architecture, University of Belgrade, at the Department of Designing Commercial and Industrial Buildings.