Socioplastics is a transdisciplinary field-building framework developed by architect, urbanist, writer, and conceptual artist Anto Lloveras at LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid. It connects architecture, conceptual art, urban systems, epistemology, metadata, pedagogy, archive theory, and infrastructural thinking in order to study how social, material, linguistic, technological, and institutional forms continuously shape one another. Rather than treating knowledge as a sequence of isolated essays, artworks, buildings, or academic papers, Socioplastics organizes thought as a growing field: a structured corpus of nodes, cores, tomes, DOIs, bibliographies, recurrent operators, and conceptual tags. Its method combines textual accretion, scalar grammar, synthetic legibility, and field maintenance, allowing one idea to expand across thousands of entries without becoming merely a mass of fragments. At its core, Socioplastics asks how an idea can become large without losing precision. It treats texts, archives, cities, infrastructures, artworks, and pedagogical situations as interdependent systems, each capable of producing form, pressure, memory, and transformation. The project is transdisciplinary not because it mixes disciplines into a hybrid style, but because each discipline performs a distinct operation: science observes recurrence and scale; art produces form and conceptual risk; literature gives language and naming; architecture supplies structure, threshold, and load; philosophy clarifies distinction, ontology, and critique. In this sense, Socioplastics is not only a body of writing but a field-environment: an authored yet distributed system for testing how concepts grow, stabilize, mutate, become legible, and remain available to future human, archival, and machinic readers.