Hundreds of “Lumenators” will be recruited to help transform the iconic landscape with dramatic moving chains of light.
The event at the UK’s biggest natural park, described as a “once in a lifetime experience” will be filmed at dusk and broadcast later online after it is staged in the Highlands in August.
Three other locations in Scotland are expected to be among up to 20 sites of natural beauty – including mountains, lakes and moorland – which will be playing host to the “Green Space Dark Skies Project” across the UK between April and September.
Green Space Dark Skies will be free to take part in and is being targeted at people from all walks of life. Each short film is expected to feature interviews with the Lumenators discussing their connections with each location.
Although organizers expect the footage from Green Space Dark Skies to be broadcast to millions, the exact locations involved will only be revealed to the 20,000 participants who sign up in advance to help protect the environment. Low-impact hand-held lighting sensitive to the night -time environment will be used.
Other locations include Dartmoor, Exmoor, Dorset, the Causeway Coast, the Brecon Beacons and Anglesey.
Green Space Dark Skies is one of six projects being staged in Scotland as part of the £120 million Unboxed festival. The official website for Green Space Dark Skies states: “These are places that anyone can visit, any time, for free.
“But we know not everybody feels welcome there. Walk the Plank is inviting people who don’t usually experience the countryside to take part and to share their stories – before, during and after.
“Together, we will celebrate nature, show that the countryside belongs to all of us, and that it is our job to protect it.”
The project, which is expected to be involved around 1000 participants in the Scottish locations, is being led by the leading outdoor theater and arts producers Walk The Plank.
Keren McKean, Walk the Plank’s producer for Scotland says, “Scotland’s landscapes are rich, unique and diverse.
“The country’s dramatic backdrop is globally recognized and attracts over 10 million tourists per year, but often local people and people from particular communities can feel like the great outdoors isn’t for them.
“Green Space Dark Skies is about engaging with communities and encouraging people to feel connected to the land, to enjoy it and to protect it.”
The Cairngorms National Park attracts more than two million visitors a year, thanks to its mountain range, which is home to four of the five highest peaks in the UK, nine nature reserves and hugely-popular watersports and snowsports facilities.
Chief executive Grant Moir said: “We’re delighted to welcome Green Space Dark Skies to the UK’s largest national park here. The project promises to create a unique spectacle celebrating nature, our responsibility to protect it and everyone’s right to explore the countryside.
“As a National Park open to all we are particularly pleased that the organizers are reaching out to such a diverse range of participants, and it is great to see an event of this scale aiming to make a net positive contribution to our collective carbon reduction targets. .”
www.scotsman.com