Knowledge does not merely accumulate: it is channelled, layered, stabilised and periodically dismantled through infrastructures that govern what becomes visible, authoritative and reusable. FlowChanneling explains how information, resources and attention are directed through apparently open environments, while StratumAuthoring and the StratigraphicField reveal that every archive, territory or institution is composed of deliberately produced layers whose earlier formations remain active. Repetition then generates RecurrenceMass, allowing certain expressions to acquire familiarity before LexicalGravity concentrates interpretation around privileged terms. Once such vocabulary organises perception, classification and institutional recognition, TopolexicalSovereignty emerges; when embedded in standards, interfaces, budgets and regulations, this authority develops into SemanticHardening and may culminate in SystemicLock. Digital repositories illustrate this progression with particular clarity: concepts become searchable through CamelTagInfrastructure, operational through CyborgText, and interpretable through SyntheticLegibility, yet uncontrolled accumulation can generate ArchiveFatigue, rendering preservation functionally inaccessible. The Socioplastics corpus itself constitutes a specific case of ScalarArchitecture: individual operators function as modular units, conceptual constellations organise intermediate relations, and the broader system produces a transdisciplinary epistemic field. Nevertheless, intellectual vitality requires more than consolidation. ProteolyticTransmutation and RecursiveAutophagia describe the selective disassembly through which systems revise inherited structures, whereas LatencyDividend identifies the renewed value released when dormant knowledge encounters novel political or computational conditions. Consequently, a robust conceptual ecology must balance stability with transformation, legibility with complexity and institutional continuity with critical renewal. Knowledge becomes durable not by resisting change, but by constructing architectures capable of absorbing, reorganising and redistributing it.