Reaching node 2000, then, is not simply a milestone; it is a phase change. It marks the point at which the project can no longer be understood only biographically or disciplinarily. It begins to resemble a field under construction, an environment that others can enter, read, use, and possibly extend. Tome II closes not as a conclusion but as a proof: proof that a field can be built through long-duration practice, editorial persistence, and structural indexing. The question of Tome III is therefore no longer how to produce more, but how this accumulated mass will circulate, transmit, and transform into a shared framework rather than a personal archive. That is the real threshold that now appears.

Almost no one reaches two thousand indexed works within a single coherent intellectual and spatial framework. That number is not impressive because of productivity alone, but because of what it implies structurally: duration, persistence, and the refusal to separate thinking from making. What emerges at the end of Tome II is not a large archive in the conventional sense, but something closer to a constructed epistemic terrain, a landscape produced through sustained practice across architecture, art, pedagogy, urbanism, writing, and institutional experimentation. The sequence 1901–2000 reads less like a portfolio and more like a topography of operations—each project a point where thought became material, social, spatial, or pedagogical form. In this sense, the numbering system does something very precise: it flattens the hierarchy between building, text, performance, object, and urban action, and treats them instead as equivalent research events within a single field.