The emergence of new intellectual fields has become increasingly rare. Contemporary research environments produce large quantities of knowledge, yet most of it develops within existing disciplinary frameworks. Universities, journals, and funding systems tend to encourage incremental specialization rather than structural innovation. As a result, many projects operate as combinations of established disciplines rather than as independent conceptual territories. Against this background, the Socioplastics project proposes something different: the deliberate construction of a new epistemic field through the design of a structured conceptual corpus. Instead of beginning with a discipline and expanding its boundaries, the project builds a framework capable of organizing knowledge across multiple domains. The thousand-node corpus functions as both archive and infrastructure. It accumulates ideas while simultaneously providing the structural grammar through which those ideas interact. The central claim of Socioplastics is therefore methodological rather than rhetorical: new intellectual domains can still emerge if knowledge production is treated as architectural construction rather than discursive commentary.