ATU team wins first place in the international Robothon Grand Challenge 2025

Pictured are the winning team, L to R: Abdulllah Haider Ali, Dipshikha Das, Camillo Murgia, and Ali Al Abbas, all are currently based at the ATU Galway campus

Pictured are the winning team, L to R: Abdulllah Haider Ali, Dipshikha Das, Camillo Murgia, and Ali Al Abbas, all are currently based at the ATU Galway campus

Four PhD researchers from Atlantic Technological University (ATU ) have won first place in the prestigious international robotics competition, the Robothon Grand Challenge 2025, hosted recently by Technical University of Munich (TUM ) MIRMI in Germany.

The TU RISE research students Dipshikha Das, Ali Al Abbas, Abdullah Haider Ali and Camillo Murgia, all living in Galway city, beat off competition from a field of eight international competitors from Germany, Ireland, India and the UAE. They built a robot solution that can perceive and react intelligently in different scenarios, as the team explains: “We tackled five core tasks ranging from vision-guided tasks to tool use and also designed our Bring Your Own Device challenge (BYOD ) to demonstrate transferable skills and adaptability. It was an incredible opportunity to apply our skills, research and creativity, and we are proud of how our team came together to deliver a robust, responsive system. We are thrilled our team, Atlabotics, has won first place, and we thank the organisers and Peter So from Technical University of Munich MIRMI for creating such a thoughtful and inspiring competition, and to everyone who supported us along the way.”

Dr Philip Long, mentor and lecturer, ATU Galway, says: “I am really proud of the team for winning first place at the Robothon Grand Challenge 2025. They developed an advanced vision-based robotic manipulation system in a very short space of time, a testament to the state-of-the-art research they are conducting as part of their PhD programmes. It is a fantastic achievement on the international stage and a great example of their creativity, technical ability, and teamwork. All four are PhD researchers at ATU through the HEA’s TU RISE programme, co-financed by the Government of Ireland and the European Union via the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF ) under the Southern, Eastern and Midland and Northern and Western Regional Programmes 2021 to 2027.”

Three of the research students, Ali Al Abbas, Camillo Murgia and Dipshikha Das, are registered under the School of Engineering (Dept of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering ) in ATU Galway, while Abdullah Haider Ali is registered under the School of Engineering (Dept of Electronic and Mechanical Engineering ) in ATU Letterkenny.

 

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