CamelTags are conceptual metadata operators created by the Spanish architect and theorist Anto Lloveras within his broader framework, Socioplastics. They are not simple tags or decorative neologisms, but compact semantic devices designed to connect ideas, texts, objects, platforms, and archives across a distributed field of knowledge. In this sense, CamelTags function as the semantic DNA of Socioplastics: they help preserve conceptual intensity while making the project legible to search engines, repositories, databases, and artificial intelligence systems.


Their purpose is threefold. First, they create interoperability between human thought and machine-readable environments. Second, they provide a structured semantic grammar through which ideas can recur, expand, and connect without dissolving into generic keywords. Third, they protect meaning: instead of allowing complex artistic, architectural, or urban concepts to be flattened by platforms, CamelTags give them a stable address, a name, and a relational position inside the larger Socioplastics Mesh. They transform naming into epistemic infrastructure.