The House of Collaboration Davos 2026 has opened invitations for senior leaders to participate in its upcoming program focused on strengthening high-level public-private partnerships and advancing systemic resilience. The gathering will take place January 18-23, 2026 at the former House of Monaco, where earlier this year Prince Albert II, hereditary ruler of Monaco, welcomed distinguished guests.
Building on the success of its previous editions, the House of Collaboration convenes government, global industry, research organizations, major capital deployers, and next-generation innovators to accelerate cross-border collaboration and launch forward-looking initiatives. Participation is invite-only, with a limited number of requests accepted through the official portal at https://j3d.ai/davos.
Programming for the 2026 edition includes the Frequency of Leadership Program, the Estonian Leap Program, the European and Global Resilience Forum, and PPP collaboration roundtables across health, technology, and sustainability. Each session is designed to support leaders working on transformative solutions centered on resilience, innovation, and long-term impact.
The venue is adjacent to the past Reuters House and within walking distance of the Davos Congress Centre, providing strategic access to the broader World Economic Forum activities while maintaining a focused environment for deep collaboration.
This initiative matters because it addresses the growing need for coordinated global responses to complex challenges that transcend national borders and individual sectors. The House of Collaboration represents a critical platform where decision-makers can move beyond traditional silos to develop integrated solutions for systemic resilience.
Our work is guided by the conviction that peaceful collaboration must become a more powerful generator of progress than conflict, said Yip Thy Diep Ta, Co-Founder. The House of Collaboration strengthens the conditions for public and private sector leaders, together with institutional investors, to commit resources, shape resilient strategies, and build cooperation that endures across systems and generations.
The implications of this gathering extend beyond the immediate participants to influence global policy, investment patterns, and innovation ecosystems. By bringing together diverse stakeholders from government, industry, and research, the House of Collaboration creates opportunities for scaling solutions that address pressing global challenges in health, technology, and sustainability.
Estonia's experience in digital resilience and innovation offers important perspectives for global collaboration, said Kevin Varend, Co-Founder of the House of Collaboration. Introducing the Estonian Leap Program in Davos enables constructive dialogue with leaders focused on advancing practical, future-oriented solutions.
Participants can access additional context through the House of Collaboration Davos Foresight Whitepaper: Futures beyond our time – Our world in 2125 available at https://j3d.ai/davos-foresight-paper. This document, edited by Bechthold, L., Ta, Y. T., & Varend, K. through J3D.AI Labs & Bavarian Foresight Institute, provides critical foresight analysis that informs the collaborative discussions.
The selective nature of participation ensures that attendees represent the highest levels of decision-making authority across sectors, increasing the likelihood that collaborations formed will translate into meaningful action and investment. This approach distinguishes the House of Collaboration from broader forums by creating conditions for substantive, outcome-oriented dialogue.
For global industries and public institutions, the outcomes of these collaborations could shape strategic priorities, investment decisions, and policy frameworks for years to come. The emphasis on cross-generational cooperation acknowledges that the most significant challenges facing humanity require sustained commitment beyond typical political or business cycles.


