Most products are not single-lifecycle systems. They are compositions of components operating on fundamentally different temporal regimes — some structurally long-lived, others subject to faster cycles of technological or functional change. Where these regimes are fused into a single lifecycle, transformation in any component propagates into the identity-bearing structure. Replacement follows. This is not a market outcome. It is an architectural consequence derivable before the first unit ships. La Profilée shows that any designed object integrating components with structurally distinct evolution speeds and claiming durability must separate its long-lived identity-bearing structure from its short-lived transformation-bearing structure, connected through defined coupling. This condition does not apply to monolithic objects with a single temporal regime — only to multi-temporal systems where the architecture determines which cycle governs the whole. This paper makes four arguments. First: the structural condition that makes durability architecturally possible, and why it differs from modularity. Second: the historical pattern — how industrial systems developed temporal separation intuitively, and how the digital and platform era began dissolving it systematically. Third: why the sustainability discourse operates downstream of this condition and addresses symptoms rather than causes. Fourth: why the shift from replacement to persistence is structurally inevitable as temporal divergence accelerates. Where this condition is satisfied, durability, dramatically reduced material waste, repairability, and economic continuity follow as consequences — not as design goals.
Marc Maibom (Sun,) studied this question.