LEAP 71 and Sindan join forces to manufacture aerospace parts with AI

Published on May 16, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

LEAP 71, from Dubai, and Sindan, from Abu Dhabi, have announced a strategic alliance to industrialize aerospace design generated by artificial intelligence. The collaboration, presented at the Make it in the Emirates fair, aims to integrate autonomous design with advanced production, reducing a process that used to take years to a continuous flow from specification to physical hardware.

Futuristic image of a metallic aerospace part, designed by AI, floating among digital gears and a map of Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

Noyron: the model that designs without humans in the loop 🚀

The centerpiece of the alliance is LEAP 71's Noyron platform, a computational engineering model that generates complex, manufacturable systems based on physical principles and production constraints. This means the AI proposes geometries and structures that meet flight requirements and machine tool limitations, eliminating the need for an engineer to perform redesign iterations. The result is a direct flow from data to physical part.

Goodbye to afternoon coffees while the engineer redraws ☕

Until now, designing an aerospace part involved weeks of calculations, sketches, and that moment when the boss says the radius of curvature doesn't fit in the milling machine. With Noyron, the AI handles everything while engineers can focus on what's important: arguing whether the coffee from the machine is better than the one from the cafeteria. The promise is that the hardware will arrive before the next round of complaints about the air conditioning.