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Georgia Tech Students Stretch the Future of Assistive Robotics
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Now in its fourth year, the Stretch Robot Pitch Competition continues to evolve into one of Georgia Tech’s most imaginative and human‑centered design challenges. Hosted by the TechSAge Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center (part of which is located in CIDI), the competition brings together students from across the Institute to create innovative applications for Stretch – a lightweight, open source mobile manipulator robot with reaching, sensing, and grasping capabilities. Stretch was developed by Hello Robot which was co‑founded by former Georgia Tech professor Charlie Kemp.
With its compact form factor, capable arm, and relatively affordable price, Stretch has already become a favorite among researchers looking to push the boundaries of assistive robotics. The pitch competition invites Georgia Tech students to imagine not just what the robot can do, but what it should do to meaningfully improve daily life for people aging with disabilities.
This year, teams across several disciplines—from engineering, to business, to computing, and the sciences—submitted video pitches outlining how their technology concept tackles real-world problems users face. The winning team earned $1,000 and, more importantly, the chance to spend a semester working with Stretch in Georgia Tech’s Aware Home turning their pitch into a working prototype. Sponsors included TechSAge, AI-CARING, the Institute for People and Technology (IPaT), and Hello Robot.
First place was awarded to “Chef Stretch,” a concept aimed at helping older adults with disabilities determine whether food has spoiled so they can prepare and consume food safely. The five-student team included Caitlin Woodward and Elizabeth Thompson (College of Engineering), Aditi Ashok (Scheller College of Business), and Michelle Gu and Vedita Sawhney (College of Sciences).
While Chef Stretch took the top prize, the judges awarded an honorable mention to Ali Vafaeian (College of Computing) for “Bimanual Clothes Manipulation and Assisted Dressing” with a $500 cash prize. His proposal tackles another essential activity of daily living, dressing, which can be challenging task for many individuals with mobility impairments.
Read more about this competition and watch the winning students pitches >>
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- Workflow status: Published
- Created by: Walter Rich
- Created: 03/05/2026
- Modified By: Walter Rich
- Modified: 03/05/2026
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