ScalarArchitecture designates the capacity of Anto Lloveras’ Socioplastics to treat scale not as a neutral variation in size but as an operative epistemic condition through which relations, functions, and intelligibilities are transformed. The operator assumes that a proposition does not remain conceptually identical when displaced from the node to the corpus, from the object to the city, or from the archive to the planetary system; instead, each scalar transition produces a recalibration of meaning, agency, and structural load. Consequently, acts such as miniaturising, expanding, nesting, translating, and rescaling become methodological procedures rather than visual metaphors. A single lexical unit, for example, may function locally as a precise identifier, collectively as part of a semantic cluster, and systemically as a load-bearing component within a corpus of thousands of interconnected nodes. This multilevel behaviour is especially visible in the development of Tome VI, where cumulative density converts the archive into a FieldEnvironment: the project no longer merely stores knowledge but generates conditions of navigation, recurrence, visibility, and attraction. ScalarArchitecture therefore explains how Socioplastics moves between microstructure and macrostructure without dissolving either. Its importance lies in establishing that scale produces qualitative difference and that infrastructural thought begins only when transitions between magnitudes are consciously designed. In this sense, the operator extends architectural intelligence beyond buildings and territories into the organisation of knowledge itself. The decisive conclusion is that scale is not a backdrop to cognition but one of its active determinants: an epistemic mechanism through which complexity becomes structured, traversable, and operational.