Launched in September, the award celebrates the range of products that can be produced on the company's machinery.
Selim Halulu, student at The AA School of Architecture, London won the October prize.
He wins a Canon Powershot SX 230 HS digital camera after his entry received a staggering 3,599 votes from all over the globe, beating over 40 UK entries.
Halulu’s entry involved an experiment using a large transparent acrylic block, and was the outcome of a series of explorative tests, using the Roland MDX-540 as part of a second year project.
He said: "In these experiments, I was producing prototypes that sought to blur the boundaries between 2D and 3D. What is unique about this piece is that although the MDX-540 milling machine is a subtractive process, due to the transparency, the milled drawings look additive when viewed from any side and any angle.
"The acrylic block was very dense and earlier prototypes had started to lose their transparency due to the amount of heat being generated during the milling process, causing milled out bits to stick back to the block.
"So, over the 50 hours it took to make this piece, we constantly sprayed water onto the acrylic block as a lubricant to remove the carved out debris. Doing this also meant that it did not need polishing post milling."