A metadesign is a system that designs not a product but the rules by which many products arise. Such systems exist — Lego, USM Haller — but each is bound to a single domain. This paper argues that La Profilée is, to the best of our knowledge, the first realized universal metadesign: one role-structure — Frame, Module, Coupling — that is already built and that holds across product kinds and, beyond the made world, wherever anything persists under transformation. The argument proceeds in two steps. First, it establishes what allows a metadesign to be universal without being empty: because the structure lives at the level of roles rather than form, it carries content while remaining scale-free, occupying a position that neither geometric forms (universal but empty) nor real things (contentful but domain-bound) can hold. Second, it shows that this structure forces a specific industrial logic. Because Frame and Module carry distinct temporal regimes held apart by a defined Coupling, the separation that constitutes persistence also reorganizes how objects are designed, produced, and kept over time. That industrial logic is therefore not a benefit attached to the design but a structural consequence of it. Because it was first built and only afterward derived as a law, La Profilée also inverts the usual order of design and theory — the object preceded the principle it turned out to instantiate. The claim is bounded: a universal metadesign fixes a condition, not a catalogue of solutions, and it yields no values or quantities.
Marc Maibom (Mon,) studied this question.