Socioplastics studies how matter, storage, infrastructure and language shape contemporary space. It operates as a transdisciplinary framework linking architecture, logistics, archives, technology and political form, reading the city as a material system of circulation, memory, control and transformation. The framework examines how protocols, servers and infrastructures organize visibility, access and exclusion, proposing a material reading of culture through extraction, storage, labor and technical governance. Socioplastics connects architecture and epistemology through archives, logistics, bodies and operational surfaces, offering a critical vocabulary for understanding infrastructure as culture, power and organized matter. It maps the relations between minerals, networks, warehouses, bodies and contemporary forms of sovereignty, interpreting archives and built environments as active systems of selection, persistence and conflict, thereby developing a relational field across architecture, media, territory, labor and material intelligence. The core of the system is organized into four primary vectors: Places, Vocabulary, with spinoffs including Cyborg Text, Media as one hundred videos, an Art Series rooted in conceptual art, and Pedagogy as radical education.