As the event's creative director, for three years his inspired design concept created the same wow factor as it had two years previously with a similarly memorable night time trail illumination of the Palm House at Kew Gardens - again using P-5s at the famous London World Heritage site.
Meanwhile, the self-guided illuminated trail at Rouken Glen followed the woodland paths to the holy grail - the waterfall, which was brought to life over the two weeks by 24 of the low-profile, carefully concealed P-5s. With this cavalcade of colour as a backdrop, many visitors took the opportunity of a selfie.
The fixtures were supplied to main technical production company, NL Productions by SGM's Glasgow-based partner Teknique Systems, who hold a large inventory.
"I would always use the P-5 for design areas that require a serious volume of light," Phil Supple confirmed. "The waterfall is very much the centrepiece of this trail, and the P-5 provided the perfect solution - with its compact size, various rigging options, great intensity and quality of colour, precision in control and reliability."
The designer set high demands during the focus stage, insisting that all the lighting units be hidden and the sources masked to highlight the beautiful landscape.
He also achieved some magical angles from a variety of beam apertures - the 43