Infrastructure & City Planning Weekly AI News

February 16 - February 24, 2026

This week's infrastructure news shows how artificial intelligence agents are changing how cities and regions plan and develop. In the United States, AI systems are now helping real estate developers find land before anyone else knows it's available. These AI agents work like smart assistants that can read zoning rules, check ownership records, and spot areas where cities are growing. Meanwhile, communities around the world are pushing back against large data centers that use too much electricity. In places like Georgia, California, and Michigan in the USA, as well as Ireland, local governments have stopped new data center projects to protect their power grids. The good news is that governments in lower-income countries are learning how to use AI to improve public services like schools and hospitals. In an exciting development, a major technology company called Autodesk invested $200 million in a company focused on spatial intelligence—which means AI that understands maps and locations. A new type of AI called "agentic AI" is being recognized as a tool that could help regular people access geographic information that was once only available to big companies. The challenge ahead is making sure cities have the energy and infrastructure to support all this AI technology while keeping communities happy and included in the planning process.

Extended Coverage
Put an agent to work

Stop reading agent demos. Give one a job you repeat every week.

Describe the work, test the first result, and keep the agent available without running your own server.

Runs without your laptopBrowser + messaging appsBackups and clonesMemory survives restarts

Plans start at $29/month. Cancel anytime.

Hosted agent

OpenClaw or Hermes

saved state
Browser
WhatsApp
Telegram
Slack
“I checked the inbox, handled the routine messages, and sent you the one question that needs a decision.”
Create an AI worker that keeps running after this tab closes.
Open Agent Factory