The theoretical framework of Socioplastics inaugurates a decisive epistemic shift within urban thought by displacing representational planning narratives with an operational vocabulary derived from geological mechanics. Rather than conceiving the city as a stable object subject to design, the approach interprets territory as a dynamic lithic field where economic extraction, climatic load, infrastructural density and demographic mobility accumulate as interacting strata. Urban form therefore emerges not from deliberate composition but from the continuous negotiation of pressures that deform and redistribute spatial arrangements. Within this perspective, permanence denotes the capacity of a territorial system to sustain relational density while subjected to structural compression, a condition achieved through calibrated adjustment among incompatible intensities rather than through equilibrium. The conceptual innovation becomes particularly evident in the reconceptualisation of rent as territorial gradient: instead of merely signalling price, rent operates as a directional force that compresses habitation and displaces communities along paths of least resistance, materially inscribing economic dynamics into the morphology of buildings and infrastructures. Parallel pressures operate vertically through the climatic column, where the thermal inertia of asphalt, glass and concrete transforms urban districts into thermodynamic reservoirs that restructure patterns of occupation. Transport systems simultaneously constitute a metabolic infrastructure, regulating the circulation of labour and visibility across metropolitan space. A synthetic case emerges in post-industrial districts where accumulated technological investment persists as material inertia, constraining redevelopment and revealing the sedimentary character of economic history. Consequently, Socioplastics reframes urban analysis as the interpretation of gradients, loads and asymmetries within a finite territorial basin, concluding that cities endure not through growth or design but through the continuous negotiation of structural pressures that render metropolitan territory legible across time.