In the age of AI, the idea of what a home is will change fundamentally. As humans begin to coexist with artificial intelligence, houses may need to include small power generators or even miniature data centers. Computing power, like electricity or water, will become part of the essential infrastructure built into everyday living spaces.
Imagine a home with a living room, a dining room, and a data room. Such a layout could become commonplace. A dedicated space for AI, or for data itself, might naturally appear in architectural plans. It could be on the rooftop, underground, or next to the bedroom. Perhaps even the family altar—once a spiritual repository of ancestral memory—could evolve into a private archive where generations of personal data are stored and shared.
Either way, we will need far more computing power at the edge. Every household could function as a small node, collectively forming a distributed computational network across neighborhoods. A society that produces and consumes both energy and compute locally may begin with the home as its basic unit.
Still, this is a vision built on the inefficiencies of today’s AI infrastructure. As models become more efficient and require fewer resources, even small-scale home data centers might disappear. In their place, countless connected devices could collaborate to form an intelligent mesh that links homes and cities into a single network. At that point, a house would no longer just be a space to live—it would be a space where information itself resides.
The idea of an “AI-ready home,” one equipped with its own computing and energy systems, may be a symbol of this transition. It represents a moment when the boundary between living space and computational space begins to blur, and the household itself becomes a unit of intelligence.
