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.