Grand Canyon wildfire: North Rim closed for season

Wildfire
Dragon Bravo Fire In this handout image provided by Grand Canyon National Park, Two firefighters stand silhouetted against an intense orange-red sky as the Dragon Bravo Fire burns through a forested area at night, with flames and smoke rising in the background at Grand Canyon National Park on July 12, 2025. The fire is located on the North Rim of the park and is estimated at 1,500 acres. Due to increased fire activity, mandatory evacuation orders were issued earlier today for North Rim residents. (Photo by Grand Canyon National Park via Getty Images) (Handout/Grand Canyon National Park via G)

The wildfires that destroyed a historic lodge have forced the closure of the Grand Canyon’s North Rim for the rest of the season.

The blaze destroyed the Grand Canyon Lodge, cabins, employee housing, visitor’s center and a wastewater treatment plant, The Associated Press reported.

All visitors and employees at the lodge were evaluated safely. The lodge was the second to stand overlooking the canyon. The first burned down in 1932 after a kitchen fire. The new lodge opened in 1937 with much of the stonework from the original building reused, The Washington Post reported.

It was the only lodging on the North Rim, Fox News reported.

In all, 50 to 80 buildings have been destroyed, but there have been no reports of injuries in the two fires that were burning -- the Dragon Bravo Fire and White Sage Fire, the AP reported.

The North Rim is one of the less popular areas of the Grand Canyon and accounts for only 10% of the millions of people who visit each year.

Hikers had to be evacuated because of the fire and concerns over chlorine gas from the wastewater plant’s destruction.

Rafters were told to avoid the Phantom Ranch area on the canyon’s floor.

The North Kaibab Trail and the South Kaibab Trail are also closed, The Washington Post reported.

Lightning started the Dragon Bravo Fire on July 4, Fox News reported. At first, federal officials had fought the fire using a “confine and contain” mission, which cleared fuel sources, but had to change to fire impression mode after the wildfires quickly spread to 7.8 square miles.

Gov. Katie Hobbs is calling for a federal investigation into the National Park Service to look into the agency’s handling of the fire, which has now burned 63 square miles over the past week, the AP reported.

Interior Department spokesperson Elizabeth Peace responded to Hobbs allegations with a statement emailed to The Washington Post, which read, “The allegation that this fire was managed as a controlled burn is not at all accurate and our wildland fire experts certainly know the difference,” adding that the agency “takes the threat of wildfires with the utmost seriousness and is committed to protecting lives, communities, and treasured public lands through science-driven fire management and rapid response.”

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