Meet our awardees
After a thorough reviewing process, we are delighted to announce the following projects that have been awarded.
Bikash wheelchair / Mobility AT repair centre (Nepal)
Awardees:
- Rajuna Singh, Sundar Dhoka Saathi Sewa, Nepal (lead applicant)
- Bikash Paudel, Zener Technologies Nepal
- Ashish Adhikari, Center for Disabled Children Assistance, Nepal
People with disabilities in Nepal often struggle to access timely wheelchair and assistive technologies (AT) repair and maintenance due to the lack of decentralised services. This project will establish repair and maintenance hubs in all seven provinces. These hubs will produce spare parts locally through 3D printing. They will also use reclaimed materials to customise mobility devices. By providing around 1,000 repair services and partnering with local NGOs and authorities, the project aims to create a sustainable, province-level support system. This project also aims to enable people with disabilities, including women with disabilities, to become technicians, providing them with employment opportunities and economic autonomy.
Initiating and strengthening an inclusive Prosthetic and Orthotic unit in Karnali province (Nepal)
Awardees:
- Pradita Pradhan, Fab Foundation Nepal (lead applicant)
- Amit Ratna Bajracharya, Limb Care Nepal Pvt. Ltd, Nepal
- Radhika Shrestha, Nepal
Limb-cycle: AI-enabled affordable prosthetic sockets from recycled plastic waste (Nepal)
Awardees:
- Dr Pratisthit Lal Shrestha, Kathmandu University, Nepal (lead applicant)
- Amit Ratna Bajracharya, Limb Care Nepal Pvt. Ltd, Nepal
- Dr Yogeshvaran Ramanathapuram Nagarajan, De Montfort University, UK
- Amrita Lama, Limb Care Nepal Pvt. Ltd, Nepal
- Strena Shrestha, Nepla Fil Pvt. Ltd., Nepal
- Raju Shrestha, Nepal
- Amit Gupta, Nepal
- Arya Ghimire, Design Lab, Kathmandu University, Nepal
- Dr Surendra Sujakhu, Kathmandu University, Nepal
Care and play: inclusive educational kits for autism and neurodiversity – building empathy and learning for every child (Nepal)
Awardees:
- Ashish Thapa, Nyano Care Pvt Ltd, Nepal (lead applicant)
- Ganga Gurung, Bloom Park Clinic, Nepal
- Tshering Wangzom, Jigme Namgyel Wangchuck Super FabLab, Bhutan
- Professor Rosie Gowran, University of Limerick / the Health Service Executive, Ireland
- Sagar Gurung, Bloom Park Pvt. Ltd, Nepal
- Dr Michelle O’Donoghue, University of Limerick, Ireland
An estimated 300,000 children live with autism in Nepal. Yet the system remains constrained: children have limited access to affordable, culturally relevant support tools, while imported technologies remain expensive and disconnected from local needs. To address this, the project aims to co-create inclusive, play-based educational kits that blend therapy and play. These tools will be co‑designed with therapists, educators, parents, and local makers to be usable not only in clinics, but also at home, in schools, and within communities. The initiative seeks to strengthen Nepal’s local AT ecosystem, demonstrating that inclusive technologies can be designed, manufactured, and sustained locally.
Empowering independence through local Assistive Technology innovation for persons with disability due to spinal injury (Nepal)
Awardees:
- Pallab Shrestha, Impact Hub Kathmandu, Nepal (lead applicant)
- Dr Raju Dhakal, Spinal Injury Rehabilitation Centre, Nepal
- Denjing Tamang, Impact Hub Kathmandu | FabLab Nepal
People with spinal injuries in Nepal often lack access to affordable, customised assistive devices, relying on expensive imports that don’t fully meet their needs. To address this, FabLab Nepal and the Spinal Injury Rehabilitation Centre (SIRC) are partnering to design and locally fabricate adaptive devices and therapy tools tailored to users at SIRC. Using a participatory, human‑centred design approach, solutions will be co‑created with users, occupational therapists, and prosthetics and orthotics specialists to ensure safety, functionality, and real‑world relevance. The project aims to promote locally made solutions and foster a more inclusive Assistive Technology ecosystem in Nepal.
Symbiotic leadership in Assistive Technologies; Upskilling women with disability advocates as inclusive design and systems innovation leaders in low-resource settings (Nepal)
Awardees:
- Anjana K.C., Disabled Women Empowerment Center-Kaski, Nepal (lead applicant)
- Suvasini Shrestha, Rainbow Disability Nepal
- Dr Farnaz Nickpour, University of Liverpool, UK
- Promina Shrestha, Virangana Collective, Nepal
- Dr Cara Shaw, The Accessibility Institute, UK
- Siobhan Riordan, Learning Communities Network, UK
In Nepal, access to AT is limited, fragmented and largely charity-driven - leaving many people with disabilities, especially women, to face compounded barriers. Expertise and trained personnel are scarce, design rarely reflects real lives, and the voices of those who understand disability best are too often left out. Symbiotic Leadership in AT began as a response to this gap: training and upskilling women leaders with lived disability experience to lead change in low-resource contexts. By centring lived experience with technical expertise, this model bridges global innovation and local needs, enabling sustainable, user-driven AT solutions.
Developing sustainable wheelchair provision education and training in Nepal: a case study
Awardees:
- Dr Raju Dhakal, Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation Centre, Nepal (lead applicant)
- Dr Mohammad (Russell) Mosayed Ullah, La Trobe University, Australia
- Professor Rosie Gowran, University of Limerick / the Health Service Executive, Ireland
- Alex Kamadu, International Society of Wheelchair Professionals, USA
- Dr Marie Abou Saab, International Society of Wheelchair Professionals, Lebanon
Integrated soft sensor system for haptic feedback in bionic hands (Tunisia)
Awardees:
- Arafet Toubib, Cure Bionics, Tunisia (lead applicant)
- Dr Carmen Salvadores Fernandez, UCL, UK
- Dr Rohit Gupta, UCL, UK
- Justin Alpha, Royal Free Hospital, UK
- Dr Gayathri Rajeswari, UCL, UK
- Dr Nikolaos Salaris, UCL, UK
- Maryam Javidan, UCL, UK
- Mohamed Dhaouafi, Cure Bionics, Tunisia
- Zahra Boukadida, Cure Bionics, Tunisia
- Bechir Yacoubi, Cure Bionics, Tunisia
MakerKo: a community-driven digital platform for AT makers and innovators in the Himalayas (Nepal, Bhutan)
Awardees:
- Ram Thapa, Makerko International, Nepal (lead applicant)
- Mijash Adhikari, Makerko, Nepal
- Tshering Wangzom, Jigme Namgyel Wangchuck Super Fab Lab / Druk Holdings and Investments, Bhutan
- Sanjay Bahadur Singh Thakuri, National Innovation Center, Nepal
- Andrew Lamb, Internet of Production Alliance, Australia
- Pradita Pradhan, Fab Foundation Nepal, Nepal
Inclusive co-design sprint: building design frameworks for accessible learning platforms for AI education through youth innovation in Viet Nam
Awardees:
- Phuong Nguyen, Inclusive Solutions, Vietnam (lead applicant)
- Tuyet Ngo, Inclusive Impact Asia, Vietnam
- Nayeon Cho, Inclusive Impact Asia, Vietnam
- I Made Wikandana, Inclusive Impact Asia, Vietnam