'Heart-breaking': Locals and visitors devastated by loss of Grand Canyon Lodge
It was not long before the small plumes transformed into huge flames. Mr Crockett, vice-president of the non-profit Grand Canyon Historical Society, went to bed but worries kept him up. The historic Grand Canyon Lodge, with its panoramic views of one of the natural wonders of the world, was in the path of those flames.
On Sunday, park officials confirmed the beloved lodge was destroyed in raging wildfires.
"It broke my heart," said Mr Crockett. "I was devastated."
Hundreds of people are sharing his sadness and posting tributes on social media to the stone lodge perched at 8,000 feet (2,438m), the only accommodation available within the national park's North Rim.
It was "stunning, a balm for my weary soul", one person wrote. "Heartbroken to hear the historic lodge, visitor center and more were destroyed."
Many of the dozens of cabins at the lodge were also lost in the Dragon Bravo Fire, which has burned over 5,000 acres.
Honeymooners, hikers and runners all treasured the lodge and its views, historians and locals said.
Karne Snickers has led tours in the North Rim for 24 years. She said the area sees fewer tourists than the South Rim because the view in parts is slightly obscured by "majestic" ponderosa trees.
But it was clear on the deck of the Grand Canyon Lodge, she said.
"It's very spiritual there," she said. "Sitting on the deck of that lodge, there isn't one dry eye from any trip that I've ever done when you turn away and have to go back to the van."
The destruction of the lodge has been like "losing an old friend".
"I shed many tears yesterday," Ms Snickers said.
The 61-year-old tour guide was there just before the fires began, when a lightning strike ignited a blaze on 4 July that officials initially thought would be containable.
But after the winds picked up, the fire exploded, Mr Crockett said.
Firefighters were there to protect the lodge, but when a water treatment plant burned down and released toxic chlorine gas into the air, they had to evacuate.
Along with the lodge, much of the surrounding nature has been lost too, including 400 year-old trees.
Ms Snickers believes one large tree she would have hikers on her tours hug is no longer there.
"Much of the beauty is gone," Mr Crockett said. "It'll take decades for things to grow back."
This was the second time the lodge burned down.
A version that opened in 1928, designed by architect Gilbert Stanley Underwood, was lost four years later from a fire that started in its kitchen.
Building a new structure during the Great Depression took years and perseverance, repurposing much of the original building's stonework and lumber.
A smaller, temporary lodge that housed construction workers also burned down for unknown reasons, according to Mr Crockett.
Then, a massive snowstorm dropped 12 feet of snow in the area one winter, cutting the workers and their families off from food and the outside world for weeks, he said.
Finally, some of the workers hiked down to the trailhead in snow shoes to call for help, bringing in snow plows to rescue the rest of the group, Mr Crockett said.
After the lodge opened once again, in 1938, it became a "summer getaway that people have just cherished over the years", he said.
Lodge guests might encounter an occasional buffalo while walking beside tall pine trees. Inside, they could take in views from the massive windows in the lodge's sun room, or from their table in the dining room, with its high ceiling that was crossed with ponderosa beams.
Park officials have yet to say whether they plan to rebuild the iconic lodge, but many visitors and locals are holding out hope.
"We have to rebuild this place," Ms Snickers said. "It's going to take time, but it needs to come back. It was a part of history."
Historic lodge destroyed in Grand Canyon blaze
Rapidly growing fire near Grand Canyon prompts evacuations

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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
What structures were still standing on the Grand Canyon's North Rim?
About 235 structures were in danger, or were already damaged or destroyed by the Dragon Bravo Fire, according to a preliminary structure loss report released by the Grand Canyon National Park on July 15. The Dragon Bravo Fire is a lightning-caused wildfire that began July 4 within the park's boundaries. It grew slowly for several days and was initially being monitored as a controlled burn for forest management purposes. But after winds picked up July 11, the fire became uncontrollable. The fire began about 4 miles from the developed area of the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park, where employees live, animals are housed and visitors stay overnight. When the fire reached the visitor hub of the North Rim, it destroyed the historic Grand Canyon Lodge, which opened in 1937, and dozens of other structures. Here's what to know about what was destroyed and what's still standing on the North Rim. What North Rim structures were destroyed or damaged? About 100 structures were destroyed as of July 15, according to the national park's preliminary structure loss report. Most of the destroyed properties were places where visitors stay, including about 75 cabins, according to the report. In addition, the mule barn, sewage treatment tanks, hazardous waste storage centers and equipment sheds were destroyed. About 12 residences were also destroyed, as well as a linen storage unit, according to the report. One structure on the north end, an electric and plumbing shop, was classified as damaged. The Dragon Bravo Fire preliminary structure loss report for July 15, 2025, detailing the north and south half of the North Rim. Provided by Grand Canyon National Park What structures were still standing but 'threatened'? Most of the structures left standing were residences and visitor lodges. Approximately 30 visitor cabins and two motel structures were still threatened by the fire. Of the residences, about 50 were classified as threatened, the report said. In addition to lodging, about seven concession properties were threatened, including a public shower area, a general store and a gas station, the report said. About seven more public properties were also threatened, including the amphitheater and several comfort stations, according to the report. A shelter and kiosk structure were classified as threatened, too, the report said. About 30 administrative structures were classified as threatened, including an employee dining room, a fitness facility and the campground registration area. (This story has been updated to add more information.) This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: What structures were still standing on the Grand Canyon's North Rim? Solve the daily Crossword

Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
The Grand Canyon Lodge burned in a wildfire. What to know about its history
The historic Grand Canyon Lodge and dozens of other structures on the North Rim have been destroyed by the Dragon Bravo Fire, Grand Canyon National Park officials announced July 13. The lodge opened in 1937 and was the only hotel located inside the national park's boundaries on the North Rim. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in the 1980s. An earlier lodge that had a different design burned down in the 1930s. Here's what we know about the Grand Canyon Lodge and its history on the North Rim, which is visited by far fewer people each year than the more developed South Rim. How many people visit the North Rim of the Grand Canyon each year? The North Rim of the Grand Canyon is visited by only a small fraction of all park visitors, according to the National Park Service. Across the whole park, over 4.9 million people visited the Grand Canyon in 2024, the National Park Service reported. In 2024, the North Rim saw 81,473 vehicle entrances, including employee entrances, according to National Park Service data. That was a 6.4% drop from the year before, according to the data. The South Rim, in contrast, saw over 1.2 million vehicle entrances in 2024, according to National Park Service data. The North Rim has not seen annual vehicle entrances over 100,000 since 2022. The North Rim's busiest year on record was 1993, with over 148,000 vehicle entrances, according to the data. Do you have photos or video of the Grand Canyon Lodge to share on We'd love to see them and share with readers. Send it to us at our video-photo upload site. The North Rim's first lodge was built in the 1920s The original North Rim lodge was built in part for the Union Pacific Railroad and opened in 1928, according to the National Park Service. Architect Gilbert Stanley Underwood followed National Park Service guidelines that required buildings to represent their environment. Its design included a second story and observation tower that were not part of the second lodge, according to the National Park Service. It was known for having college student workers who acted as part-time entertainers for the lodge, regularly performing musical welcomes for new visitors, according to the National Park Service. First lodge burned down in September 1932 In September 1932, a fire destroyed the lodge quickly, sending the lodge's staff fleeing in the early morning hours, according to the National Park Service. According to "Grand Canyon Rim to Rim History," a book by Davy Crockett, the blaze started as a kitchen fire when a chef was preparing breakfast for employees. Guests in adjoining cabins volunteered to help stop the spread of the flames, according to Crockett. The Union Pacific Railroad quickly reestablished a cafeteria and recreation hall after the 1932 fire, according to the National Park Service. North Rim lodge was rebuilt despite earlier fire The rebuilt lodge opened in June 1937. It had a limestone façade that was sourced nearby, and massive ponderosa pine trees were turned into support beams to hold up a sloped roof capable of supporting heavy loads of snow, according to the National Park Service. The new lodge sat on the foundation of the former and used many of the original's materials. The lodge complex consisted of a main lodge building with 23 deluxe cabins and over 90 regular cabins. It also included a saloon, a deli, a coffee shop, a post office, a gift shop, and a visitors center. The lodge was known for its "sun room," which greeted visitors with a view of the Canyon, according to the National Park Service. Where is the Grand Canyon Lodge? The Grand Canyon Lodge was considered the hidden gem of the North Rim, which is the more remote portion of Grand Canyon National Park. The more developed South Rim has several historic structures, including El Tovar, a hotel that opened in 1905. How did the fire that burned down the Grand Canyon Lodge start? The lightning-caused Dragon Bravo Fire started on July 4. It grew, and evacuation orders were issued for the North Rim on July 11. Hot, dry, and windy conditions fueled the fire's growth, with flames spreading through mixed conifer, aspen, and ponderosa pine forests, according to InciWeb, a federal government wildfire tracker. The fire had spread to 5,000 acres and was 0% contained as of July 13, according to InciWeb. What will happen at the North Rim after the fire is extinguished? Firefighters were working to extinguish the Dragon Bravo Fire. Park officials have not said when the North Rim would reopen or whether the area would be rebuilt. Gov. Katie Hobbs questioned the handling of the fire and called for an investigation. Officials opted to manage the wildfire, which started July 4, as a controlled burn rather than immediately extinguish it. Contact reporter Rey Covarrubias Jr. at rcovarrubias@ Follow him on Instagram, X, Threads and Bluesky: @ReyCJrAZ. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Grand Canyon Lodge at the North Rim destroyed by fire: What to know


National Geographic
3 days ago
- National Geographic
The best summers of my life were spent at the Grand Canyon Lodge. Now it's gone.
I'm not usually one to get weepy over a hotel, let alone a patio and some rough-hewn wooden furniture. But when Arizona's famous Grand Canyon Lodge and a number of smaller adjacent structures burned down on the night of July 12 in the Dragon Bravo Fire, a blaze that to date has consumed 11,344 acres and remains entirely uncontained, it left a hole in more than just the conifer forest of the North Rim. My heart, my friends' hearts—there's a hole in each of these now. And there are similar holes in the hearts of thousands of folks across the globe who also loved, and still love, and will forever love, that rustic palace, that gobsmacking view, that superlative place. In 2024, close to five million visitors experienced the beauty and wonder of Grand Canyon National Park, but only ten percent of them ventured to the high, green, thrillingly remote North Rim. For those that did make the five-hour drive from Las Vegas, or the six-hour drive from Flagstaff, or the seven-hour drive from Salt Lake City, the Grand Canyon Lodge, which until this past weekend perched at an elevation of 8,000 feet near the tip of Bright Angel Point, was invariably the destination. Designed by architect Gilbert Stanley Underwood and built in 1928 with local ponderosa pine and Kaibab Limestone, it was destroyed in 1932 thanks to a runaway kitchen fire. Phoenixes rise from ashes, though, and in 1937 it opened again for business—the business of blowing minds. (Did you know the Grand Canyon is a Dark Sky Park?) The Dragon Bravo Fire burns on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon in Northern Arizona early Sunday morning July 13th, 2025. The fire was started by lighting and left to burn under managed conditions for fuels and resource benefits, but strong winds caused the fire to jump containment lines and burn out of control. Photograph by Stuart Palley Picture a sprawling mansion, solid, heavy, grounded, yet paradoxically hovering above the glowing abyss, the dizzying emptiness of geologic time. Picture old-growth logs framing gargantuan windows, splinters and chandeliers, earthiness and elegance in equal measure. Picture stepping out, stepping through, whispering a few celebratory expletives, shouting a G-rated version of the same, and taking a seat at sunset on the patio of your dreams, the patio of—what a crazy lucky blessing!—my reality. Mike, Ally, Zak, Zig, Jeff, Tara, Sophia, Zig, Carrie, Richard—my friends and I differed considerably from the tour-bus-and-zoom-lens crowd. US Forest Service raptor scientists, we resided in a barebones field station 40 washboard miles from the Lodge and bushwhacked, week after week and month after month, the whole vast Kaibab Plateau (both the National Forest and National Park) in pursuit of molted feathers, crying hawks, active nests, data for the boss' demography and habitat studies. Richard, a brilliant septuagenarian ornithologist sporting a handlebar mustache and chunky silver belt buckle, had been conducting research on the Kaibab for 17 years already when I joined the project in 2008. Over the next four summers, alongside my fellow bird nerds, I became intimate with the North Rim's secret vistas, its hidden backcountry delights. (A park ranger's guide to the Grand Canyon) Sunset from the lodge on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Brahma and Zoroaster temples bask in the warm light of the setting sun. In the distance, clouds cling to the distant rim of the canyon after a summer monsoon storm, 2015. Photograph by Adam Schallau The Grand Canyon Lodge on the North Rim of Grand canyon National Park, 2011. Photograph by Adam Schallau Honestly, we were snobs, eco-elites, wilderness cognoscenti accustomed to musty sleeping bags who scoffed at the idea of the Lodge's clean sheets. But even hardcore nature freaks need a little civilization—a cold beer and slice of pepperoni pizza—on occasion. If the North Rim was our backyard (it was), the Lodge was our clubhouse—a clubhouse that happened to be listed as a National Historic Landmark. Every third or fourth Friday evening, we would pile into the trucks and crash the sunset party, i.e. try to snag, then defend, a block of benches and rockers amidst the oohing and ahhing crowds. There's Zak, chatting about Coconino Sandstone and the Hermit Formation with a stylish French lady. There's Ally, dodging a Texas oilman's bulging belly as she seeks a fresh angle on Zoroaster Temple and Oza Butte. There's Richard and Zig, carrying a pie to split and a round of IPAs, their Adirondack chairs lost due to my negligence, my absence, my piano playing. (The least crowded trails at Grand Canyon National Park) Interior of the Lodge on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Photograph by Elliot Ross (Top) (Left) and Photograph by Elliot Ross (Bottom) (Right) Yes, piano playing. In a lecture hall behind our favorite patio (the Lodge boasted many), I found an underutilized, almost-in-tune upright. We had guitars and banjos at the field station, but no keys, so I always seized the opportunity to pause between drinks and improvise simple spacious ambient jams, music that matched (I hoped) the chasm's hollow moody mysterious depths. One epic Friday of bruised purple skies, rain and thunder, meteorological tympany, I grooved in concert with the storm's pulsing energy, and when I finally looked up from my reverie, twenty-odd strangers—toddlers and elders, Alaskans and Germans and Mongolians and Tucsonians, a uniformed ranger—had gathered to listen. Of course, their backs were turned to me, their eyes fixed on the distant horizon, the flashing lightning, the desert immensity, the real show. 'Nicely done,' an Aussie said. 'Thanks for the soundtrack, mate.' The sun rises above Grand Canyon National Park Sunday July 13th, 2025 as smoke from the Dragon Bravo Fire fills the canyon. Phantom Ranch and other lower trails were closed and evacuated due to a choline gas leak after a water treatment plant was damaged by the fire in the North Rim visitor area. Photograph by Stuart Palley This memory and a dozen others came to the surface, vivid and warm, the moment I learned that the North Rim was closing for the rest of the season, and that the popular inner corridor hiking trails were closing too, and that the Dragon Bravo Fire was expanding, and that the Lodge, my Lodge, our Lodge, everyone's Lodge, was officially gone. Gone? Seriously? I sent a message to Mike, my dear pal from the Kaibab, my best buddy from the absolute best summers imaginable, the individual who, I was certain, understood the weird mixed feeling, a braid of sorrow and joy: 'Dude. It burned. Terrible. Tragic. But damn am I grateful to have shared such sweet times there with you and the gang. Unbelievable privilege. Unbelievable spot. The Lodge is dead, long live the Lodge!' He responded: 'Let's meet on the patio in three years, once it's rebuilt. My daughter—I've been meaning to call you, we're expecting a baby girl!—will be eager to see the sunset.' Ashes, phoenixes, indeed.