A school project can be a poster board and a nervous speech. For two teens in Quindio, it became a flight to Singapore and a world prize. Their robot idea, Avitron, turned a simple question into a big moment.
The question was farm-life simple: How can small poultry growers waste less feed and keep chickens healthier. The answer involved mixed robotics, coding, and AI, and it earned Colombia a standout award at World Robot Olympiad 2025.
A win far from home
The WRO 2025 final in Singapore brought together more than 1,500 young participants from many countries. In that crowd, Colombia’s team took the Technical Solution Award in Future Innovators Junior.
The students were Sofia Garzon Sanchez and Juan Pablo Celades Silva from GI School in Armenia. Their project name, Avitron, became the reason Quindio showed up in a global robotics conversation.
Behind the scenes, the coaching team mattered. Julian Fernando Vargas Escobar guided the students, and Juan Jose Ramirez Betancur, an electronics engineering student from Universidad del Quindio, supported the technical work.
Meet Avitron, the smart poultry station
Avitron was built for the daily chaos of a rural chicken coop. It dispenses food automatically, recognizes individual hens, and helps stop other species from eating feed meant for the birds.





