Living With / Vivre Avec

Biodiversity Discovery Center by Guinée*Potin Architectes. Photo © Willy Berré. Image printed on plywood panel.

About the program

Living With / Vivre Avec

at 840 N. Michigan Avenue

840 N. Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60611

Public hours are Thursday–Sunday, 12:00–6:00 p.m. Closed on Saturday, November 22; Thanksgiving, Thursday, November 27; Christmas Day, Thursday, December 25; Friday, December 26; and New Year's Day, Thursday, January 1.

The exhibition Living With / Vivre Avec explores how architecture can respond to the global instability of our era—marked by conflict, climate crisis, and displacement—by embracing change rather than resisting it. It calls for an architecture that sustains life on a fragile planet, blending memory and innovation, continuity and transformation. Through six themes and international projects, the exhibition showcases how design can foster resilience, adaptability, and collective care in uncertain times.

Living With / Vivre Avec was first created for the French Pavilion at the XIX Venice Architecture Biennale, and commissioned by the Institut français with Dominique Jakob and Brendan Macfarlane lead curators in association with Eric Daniel-Lacombe and Martin Duplantier.

The itinerant version of this exhibition, presented here in Chicago, is commissioned by Villa Albertine, the French Institute for Culture and Education, and made possible by the generous sponsorship of Saint-Gobain, worldwide leader in light and sustainable construction.

The exhibition design was conceived in partnership with the Chicago Architecture Biennial. It was facilitated by Civic Projects Architecture.

Venue

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840 N. Michigan Avenue

Address

840 N. Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60611

Description

The Biennial expands its footprint downtown with the opening of its fifth site at 840 N. Michigan Avenue, transforming more than 65,000 square feet of space on the Magnificent Mile into a dynamic hub for art, design, and dialogue. 

Chicago Architecture Biennial at 840 N. Michigan Ave. Photo: Pablo Gerson.
Chicago Architecture Biennial