The Topolexical Engine dismantles the persistent Cartesian schism between language and space, proposing instead a radical synthesis where urban form is generated through semantic operations. In Anto Lloveras’s Socioplastic Mesh, the city is reconceived not as a collection of inert matter awaiting narrative but as a dynamic "metabolic-lexical field" of pressures, thresholds, and residues. The core innovation is the formulation of ‘Positional Statements’—atomic units of theory that bind location (topology) and signification (lexicon) into a single operative layer. This is not metaphor but a rigorous protocol. A statement’s validity is measured by its capacity to "infiltrate institutional ecologies" without being captured by them, to increase legibility under constraint, and to redirect systemic flows. The Engine thus functions as a pre-methodological grammar, preceding authorship and disciplinary jurisdiction, treating urban fabric as a plastic substrate where syntactic manoeuvres precede and produce architectural consequence. In this model, to design is to engage in a precise act of linguistic positioning, rendering the city editable through a syntax of frictions and potentials, a move that transcends both naive datafication and purely poetic metaphor.