Most AI applications begin with a direct model integration.
Install an SDK, add an API key and send a prompt. This works well until the application needs a second provider.
A coding task may work better with one model, while another may be more suitable for vision, reasoning, long context or low-cost processing. At that point, model access becomes an architecture problem.
The dependency problem
When provider-specific logic lives inside product code, the application becomes responsible for:
authentication
request formats
model names
rate limits
retries
usage tracking
error handling
provider switching
Every new provider increases this complexity.
The solution is to introduce a model layer between the application and the providers.
Define workloads, not providers
Your product should describe what it needs instead of deciding how a specific provider should deliver it.
type Workload =
| "reasoning"
| "coding"
| "vision"
| "fast-response";
interface AIRequest {
workload: Workload;
input: string;
}
interface AIResult {
content: string;
model: string;
provider: string;
usage: number;
}
The routing policy can remain outside the application:
const modelPolicy = {
reasoning: "reasoning-model",
coding: "coding-model",
vision: "vision-model",
"fast-response": "low-latency-model"
};
async function runAI(request: AIRequest): Promise {
const model = modelPolicy[request.workload];
return modelLayer.generate({
model,
input: request.input
});
}
Now the product depends on workloads and capabilities rather than one provider’s SDK.
Compatibility is only the beginning
A compatible request format reduces integration work, but production systems also need:
centralized API keys
usage and cost records
retry policies
provider health checks
billing rules
fallback models
operational logs
This is why multi-model infrastructure is becoming its own application layer.
VectorNode is being built around this category: multi-model access and operations for AI applications.
The long-term advantage is not access to one particular model. It is the ability to change models without rebuilding the product.
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