Compute Isn’t Weightless: AI Infrastructure and the Architecture of the City

Compute Isn’t Weightless: AI Infrastructure and the Architecture of the City
2025 Hong Kong–Shenzhen Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture (Hong Kong): Techformance. Image © Jimmy Ho, Courtesy of UABB2025 2025 Hong Kong–Shenzhen Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture (Hong Kong): Techformance. Image © Jimmy Ho, Courtesy of UABB2025

As artificial intelligence continues to disrupt sectors of the economy and reshape entire industries, institutions and individuals alike are bracing—and rapidly adapting—to the changes that machines seem to hold over our heads. Yet the more precise pressure is not simply AI altering the way people work and live, but the business models and investment logics of the companies developing these systems: the concentration of capital, the new requirements for compute, the race for compartmentalized talent, and the infrastructural footprint needed to sustain it. In the Greater Bay Area—anchored by Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong—this dynamic is especially pronounced. Government-led initiatives are actively accelerating the industry's growth, with policy and planning mechanisms beginning to translate an ostensibly intangible field into physical form: zoning updates, earmarked land, and the emergence of AI-oriented building types, from research laboratories to large-scale data centers.

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