Additive manufacturing has enabled the production of more advanced reactor geometries, resulting in the potential for significantly larger and more complex design spaces. Identifying and optimising promising configurations within broader design spaces presents a significant challenge for existing human-centric design approaches. As such, existing parameterisations of coiled-tube reactor geometries are low-dimensional with expensive optimisation limiting more complex solutions. Given algorithmic improvements and the onset of additive manufacturing, we propose two novel coiled-tube parameterisations enabling the variation of cross-section and coil path, resulting in a series of high dimensional, complex optimisation problems. To ensure tractable, non-local optimisation where gradients are not available, we apply multi-fidelity Bayesian optimisation. Our approach characterises multiple continuous fidelities and is coupled with parameterised meshing and simulation, enabling lower quality, but faster simulations to be exploited throughout optimisation. Through maximising the plug-flow performance, we identify key characteristics of optimal reactor designs, and extrapolate these to produce two novel geometries that we 3D print and experimentally validate. By demonstrating the design, optimisation, and manufacture of highly parameterised reactors, we seek to establish a framework for the next-generation of reactors, demonstrating that intelligent design coupled with new manufacturing processes can significantly improve the performance and sustainability of future chemical processes.