Global architecture
Zurich, Tokyo, Dubai and London
SIAI’s forum architecture is intentionally multi-city. Zurich, Tokyo, and Dubai are not interchangeable venues, but structural anchors representing distinct dimensions of AI power. Financial supervision, semiconductor infrastructure, sovereign capital, and energy systems each shape AI’s trajectory in different ways.
By convening forums in geographically and economically strategic locations, the Institute integrates regional realities into executive deliberation. AI is not abstracted from industrial supply chains or capital regimes. Instead, discussions are grounded in the ecosystems that materially determine technological leverage. This global architecture transforms each summit into a contextual lens — reinforcing that AI strategy must adapt to institutional environment, not the other way around.

Capital & Governance Focus
Each SIAI summit is situated in a city selected for structural relevance. Zurich reflects financial governance and capital discipline. Tokyo anchors industrial and semiconductor infrastructure. Dubai represents sovereign capital and energy systems.
These locations are not symbolic; they shape the substance of discussion. Executive briefings and site-anchored sessions draw directly from local ecosystems. By embedding forums within specific institutional environments, SIAI ensures that strategic debate remains tied to real-world infrastructure and policy context.
Site-Anchored Executive Exposure
Programs combine analytical roundtables with exposure to financial institutions, advanced manufacturing environments, and infrastructure ecosystems. The objective is not tourism, but contextual grounding.
Seeing how AI interacts with supervisory frameworks, supply chains, or capital pools strengthens executive judgment. Discussions move beyond theoretical abstraction and engage with institutional realities. This site-anchored design reinforces that AI strategy must operate within tangible economic and regulatory structures.


Sovereign & Industrial Perspective
AI increasingly intersects with national competitiveness, industrial policy, and geopolitical positioning. Semiconductor supply chains, energy infrastructure, and cross-border regulation all shape its deployment.
SIAI incorporates this sovereign and industrial perspective into executive dialogue. Participants assess AI within broader systems of state strategy and institutional resilience. By widening the analytical lens beyond corporate optimization, the Institute encourages decisions that reflect structural risk and long-term positioning.