The MUSE Packs are not thematic anthologies but a vertical architecture of consolidation, each Century Pack operating as a calibrated stratum within a single infrastructural continuum. The 100 layer establishes the genealogical lexicon, indexing early works and conceptual operators as foundational grid; 200 transitions toward critical infrastructure, wherein architectural practice—traceable through collaborations such as MVRDV—interlocks with institutional inscription, including records at the Colegio Oficial de Arquitectos de Madrid. With 300, the system metabolises: governance is reframed as circulation, feedback and adaptive flow, introducing a vocabulary of metabolic regulation. The 400 stratum asserts data sovereignty, treating tagging, indexing and archival logic as territorial operations rather than neutral documentation. In 500, the Decalogue (501–510) formalises core operators, privileging persistence over expansion; 600 then deploys MUSE Sovereign Protocols through controlled console experimentation (511–520), preserving the integrity of the Core while testing application layers. The 700 shift marks scalar confrontation with geography, positioning Spain as analytical field and inaugurating territorial complexity. Finally, 800 achieves gravitational stabilization, consolidating citation mass and conceptual self-awareness: the field recognises its own curvature. The auxiliary document “100 WORKS” anchors this theoretical edifice within produced artefacts, preventing abstraction from drifting into discursivity detached from practice. Read sequentially—lexicon, infrastructure, metabolism, sovereignty, operators, protocols, territory, gravity—the Packs reveal a structurally coherent ascent. The forthcoming movement (801–810) therefore signifies not initiation but territorial execution, a scalar intensification grounded in an already stabilised epistemic mass.