1. Kathrin Dörfler is an architect, researcher, and educator in computational design and robotic fabrication. She holds a master's degree in architecture from TU Vienna and a PhD in digital fabrication from ETH Zurich. In 2019, Kathrin joined the School of Engineering and Design at the Technical University of Munich as a tenure-track professor to set up a research group for digital fabrication in the Department of Architecture. Her group's research interests lie at the intersection of collaborative fabrication processes, on-site robotics, additive manufacturing, and fabrication-aware design. 2. Jan Knippers is a structural engineer and since 2000 head of the Institute for Building Structures and Structural Design (ITKE) at the University of Stuttgart. His interest is in innovative and resource-efficient structures at the intersection of research and development and practice. From 2014 to 2019 Jan Knippers was coordinator of the collaborative research centre TRR141 "Biological Design and Integrative Structures" at the Universities of Stuttgart, Tübingen and Freiburg. Since 2019 he is Deputy Director of the Cluster of Excellence "Integrative Computational Design and Construction" and currently dean of the Faculty of Architecture and Urban Planning. 3. Achim Menges is a registered architect in Frankfurt and full professor at Stuttgart University, where he is the founding director of the Institute for Computational Design and Construction (ICD) and the director of the Cluster of Excellence Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture (IntCDC). In addition, he has been Visiting Professor in Architecture at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design and held multiple other visiting professorships in Europe and the US. The focus of his practice and research is on interdisciplinary and integrative approaches to computational design and construction. 4. Stefana Parascho is a researcher, architect, and educator whose work lies at the intersection of architecture, digital fabrication and computational design. She is currently an Assistant Professor at EPFL where she founded the Lab for Creative Computation (CRCL). Through her research, she has explored multi-robotic fabrication methods and their relationship to design. Before joining EPFL, Stefana was an Assistant Professor at Princeton University, where she led the CREATE Lab Princeton. She completed her doctorate in 2019 at ETH Zurich, Gramazio Kohler Research. Previously, she received her Diploma in Architectural Engineering from the University of Stuttgart and worked with DesignToProduction Stuttgart and Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineering. 5. Helmut Pottmann is a professor of Applied Mathematics and Computational Science at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) and founding director of the Visual Computing Center at KAUST. He has had faculty positions in the US and in Germany and has been a Professor of Applied Geometry at TU Vienna since 1992. His research interests are in Applied Geometry, Visual Computing and most recently in Geometric Computing for Architecture and Manufacturing. He has co-authored a book and influential papers on Architectural Geometry and is a co-founder of the AAG conference series. Helmut Pottmann is a Fellow of SIAM and recipient of the Eurographics Outstanding Technical Contributions Award. 6. Thomas Wortmann directs the Chair for Computing in Architecture at the Institute of Computational Design and Construction (ICD/CA) at the University of Stuttgart. He holds a Master of Architecture from University of Kassel, a Master of Science in Design and Computation from MIT, and a PhD in Architecture and Sustainable Design from Singapore University of Technology and Design. He researches the application of artificial intelligence (AI) methods-such as AI reasoning, AI planning, supervised learning, optimization, and multi-variate visualization-in architectural design and construction pr