Sylar has received the following awards and nominations. Way to go!
Instead of thinking about assembling large and rigid objects in space, we can imagine an expanding object designed to fold into the smallest possible space.
In this way
1. It would take up less space on the launch module

2. It is more reliable in deployment
3. Creases on the metal increase the rigidity of the structure, so the external structure could be thinner and lighter, allowing us to bring a larger object into orbit.
By foldingor rolling a material, you create a "thickness" which allows it to reinforce itself and not collapse so easily.
Corrugated steel, corrugated cardboard, creases in the external panels of your car. Ridges in shells, palm leaves. Every one of these leverages bends in a sheet to increase it’s strength.

We have always been fascinated by the "space debris" issue that inflicts out planet, and
since we are both students of mechanical engineering, practical architectural solutions are the ones that most stimulate our creativity.
Surfing the internet and doing some research, we found out that the current problems that exist regarding space assembly are mainly:
-the possibility of robotic arms to being hit by space debris such micro metal fragments
(https://www.theguardian.com/science/2020/sep/23/iss-forced-to-move-to-avoid-space-debris) ;
-the erosion of mechanical components due to friction with the atmosphere, which, although subtle, is not negligible at high speeds;
-the "seven degrees of freedom" that the NASA servicing robot has — a three-axis shoulder, a pitch actuator at the elbow, and a three-axis spherical wrist. Very complicated to manoeuvre and easy to break ;
-the additional weight of the manoeuvring propellant that must be added at the moment of launch into orbit
(https://spacenews.com/starliner-anomaly-to-prevent-iss-docking/) ;
Considering all these issues, we therefore agreed that it would have been better to reinvent from scratch a construction system suitable for the space environment.
Drive folder containing slides:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1p3jfaguu67WkLjf8gnBF_WJoVLv_fSmf?usp=sharing