This whitepaper articulates the Neurosync Quaternary Architecture: a four-party institutional framework for community-owned waste stream monetisation. The framework integrates an IP-holding architectural principal at the centre, a coalition of parties whose economies bleed from the current situation as funders, a residents' or workers' cooperative as operator under licence, and a host jurisdiction as physical infrastructure owner under concession. The cooperative captures 80-90% of operational value for the host community. The architecture extends the Community Wealth Building tradition (Cleveland Model, Preston Model, Mondragón Corporation) through the integration of an IP-holding architectural principal as a fourth load-bearing role — the addition that makes the architecture portable across territories and across application domains. The framework's first iteration is the response to the Atlantic sargassum trajectory. Documented annual landings are doubling across the Caribbean basin, with peer-reviewed economic damage methodology quantifying losses at multiples of the cost of structural intervention. The whitepaper demonstrates how the architecture deploys in this context: 200 wet tonnes per day per facility engineering specification, approximately 180 facilities required by 2032 for basin-wide coverage, active institutional engagement across Caribbean jurisdictions, the United States Atlantic coast, French Caribbean, and the broader corridor. Further iterations across additional waste stream domains are under active exploration. The architectural principles apply wherever the structural pattern is present. Intended for institutional and commercial decision-makers in jurisdictions facing waste stream challenges. Substantive conversation about deployment is invited under appropriate confidentiality arrangements.
Kirk Harper (Thu,) studied this question.