Anto Lloveras is a Spanish architect, urbanist, researcher, curator and educator whose practice moves across architecture, landscape, public space, exhibition design and cultural production.

Trained at ETSAM–Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, with further studies at TU Delft, he began his professional career in Madrid and the Netherlands, working with Martín Clavo Arquitectos, EFWA in Amsterdam, HTM in The Hague and MVRDV in Rotterdam. His early work included urban planning for Bergen op Zoom, technical coordination across forty HTM buildings and participation in projects such as Mirador Madrid, BMW Showroom, IKEA City Prototypes and Ups and Downs in Amsterdam. From 2002 to 2008 he was partner-director of TABLE Arquitectura in Madrid, where he led and developed more than one hundred projects spanning housing, rehabilitation, industrial buildings, exhibition architecture, television sets, interiors and competitions, including the Trole Building, ARCO 2005 and a series of adaptive-reuse projects published and recognised through the Madrid architectural context. His later work expanded into Norway through collaborations with Fredrik Lund and NTNU, developing projects in timber architecture, landscape, civic infrastructure and experimental pedagogy, including Thewoodway, Husøy Arena, Twin Houses, the Open Air Gallery and proposals for museums and cultural buildings in the fjord landscape. As co-founder of URBANAS, he has continued to work on international urban competitions, sustainable neighbourhoods and public-space projects, among them NTNU City Campus 2050 and El Palmeral, awarded an honourable mention and published by COAM. In parallel, he founded LAPIEZA-LAB, an independent platform through which he has directed more than 200 exhibitions and built a sustained practice around relational museography, public interpretation and transdisciplinary production. His work has been presented across Europe, Latin America and Africa, including the Lagos Art and Architecture Biennial 2024. Across more than two decades of professional activity, Lloveras has combined intensive architectural and urban practice with a broader body of work in teaching, research, curating and spatial experimentation. His current research framework, Socioplastics, understands architecture not only as the production of buildings, but as a system for organising knowledge, structuring relations and giving durable public form to collective experience.