AI can rapidly generate a minimum viable product (MVP), but using AI shifts the role and focus of software architecture rather than eliminating it.
AI-generated code acts largely as a “black box”, making implicit architectural decisions that teams may not fully understand, control, or maintain over time. This approach introduces risks around technical debt, sustainability, and integration with existing systems, particularly when quality attribute requirements (QARs) such as scalability, security, and performance must be met.
As a result, architecture becomes more empirical. Instead of designing systems primarily up front, teams must focus on validating AI-generated architectures through experimentation and architectural testing, including performance, usability, resilience, and security testing. These validation activities help determine whether the system satisfies business and technical requirements.
Architectural decision-making remains critical, but it should shift toward clearly articulating trade-offs and constraints in prompts so AI can generate appropriate solutions.
Architects must also consider long-term maintainability, because AI-generated code may be difficult to evolve or repair. Ultimately, AI accelerates implementation, but increases the importance of defining architectural qualities, validating outcomes empirically, and ensuring systems remain sustainable as AI tools evolve.
In a related InfoQ video podcast, Shweta Vohra and Grady Booch recently explored a principled view of how architecture must evolve when machines begin writing code alongside humans.
This content is a short summary of a recent InfoQ article by Pierre Pureur and Kurt Bittner, "You've Generated Your MVP Using AI. What Does That Mean for Your Software Architecture?"
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