Late on the night of July 12, 2025, a wind-driven wildfire exploded on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, burning dozens of structures, including the historic Grand Canyon Lodge. Widely regarded as one of the most intact rustic lodges in the national park system, the structure has been reduced to stone pillars. Like many other beloved hotels in our national parks, the lodge was built by a railroad company in the first third of the 20th century and had burned before. Also like many historic properties across the United States, the lodge was partially built of wood. Its traditional construction, which helped secure its spot on the National Registry of Historic Places, contributed to its destruction.

Historic structures destroyed by wildfire
Stone chimneys remaining from Grand Canyon Lodge. Credit: NPS Photo/Matt Jenkins

Recent wildfires have also destroyed historic downtowns where many buildings were more than a century old and primarily constructed of wood. Greenville, California, a Gold Rush town with rows of colorful wooden storefronts, was razed by the 2021 Dixie Fire. The devastating 2023 wildfire in Lahaina, Hawaii, destroyed the town’s historic commercial core. And a 2024 wildfire complex destroyed nearly three-quarters of the historic town of Jasper, Alberta, in Canada.

Nearly a quarter (24%) of public and private properties listed in the National Register of Historic Places fall within counties with high or very high wildfire risk, according to data maintained by the National Park Service and the USDA Forest Service. Many of these counties have high exposure to wind-driven urban conflagrations that can consume thousands of structures in hours. In all these counties, historic buildings—whether on the national registry or not—attract visitors, drive economic activity, and serve as cornerstones of local culture.

Despite nearly a quarter of properties on the National Register of Historic Places being in high wildfire risk areas, preservation protocols often restrict the use of measures shown to improve structural survivability.

Unfortunately, reducing the vegetation around these buildings – a practice known as improving defensible space – may not be enough to save them. Due to their flammable construction, historic structures are uniquely vulnerable to both wildfire embers and radiant heat. Windblown embers, which can travel miles ahead of the main flame front, are the leading cause of structure loss. When a single building is set alight by embers, the intense radiant heat can ignite nearby buildings without any flame contact. Many striking post-fire photographs, including those of the Grand Canyon Lodge, show completely destroyed buildings surrounded by mature, living trees – an indication that buildings are often at greater risk of burning during a wildfire than the trees that surround them.

Methods to reduce wildfire spread between structures are well known and increasingly integrated into building codes. But the guidance for restoring, rehabilitating, and reconstructing historic structures frequently contradicts wildfire-resistant building standards, even mandating the precise practices that wildfire protection standards discourage or ban. For instance, many wildfire-prone communities have banned or otherwise minimized the use of wood on the exterior surfaces of new buildings, including roofs, siding, and decks. Yet some of the same communities simultaneously mandate that historic building restoration continues to use wood.

Likewise, years of deadly urban conflagrations have driven several states, including Colorado, Oregon, Washington, California, and Utah, to explore the adoption of building codes that ban combustible building materials in new construction in high wildfire risk areas. But even the most recent result of these efforts, the newly passed Colorado Wildfire Resiliency Code, exempts historic structures on local, state, and federal registries from its regulations.

Historic preservation is intended to ensure that the buildings that anchor many communities survive for generations to come. Yet many of these buildings include significant features made of highly flammable, centuries-old wood, making them costly to insure and hard for firefighters to save. Making sure that these treasured landmarks endure will require a shift in preservation policy. To date, however, historic preservation practices and standards—including the federal standards used by government agencies and private-sector preservation professionals alike—have not adapted to increases in wildfire risk. Many of these standards continue to encourage practices that make wildfire losses likely.


The Department of the Interior’s (DOI) Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties, for example, does not provide substantive recommendations to improve the survivability of a historic building in a wildfire. These high-level standards have remained largely unchanged since they were first written in the 1960s, although the federal government has issued several updates in the form of guidelines or policy briefs. In terms of disaster adaptation, the most consequential of these, “Guidelines on Flood Adaptation for Rehabilitating Historic Buildings,” seeks to correct the decades-old decision to exempt historic structures from flood protection measures by offering preservation alternatives for properties facing flood risk.

It is the federal government’s intent that communities should avoid making the same mistake with buildings exposed to wildfire risk. To encourage adaptation, the standards now suggest that special exceptions or variances may be considered to protect a building from known hazards, although wildfire-related criteria or examples have not yet been provided. These details are forthcoming — the Department of the Interior expects to publish a wildfire-specific policy brief in 2026.

Historic buildings face unique risks

Historic downtowns across the country were built and designed before the advent of modern building codes and fire safety practices. In the early 19th century, the frequent fiery devastation of downtowns and large portions of cities inspired building codes, water infrastructure such as fire hydrants, and the first paid fire departments. By the 1830s, in an ongoing effort to curb urban fire, cities including Boston, Philadelphia, and New York had widened streets and transitioned from mostly wood-frame construction to less combustible materials such as brick or steel.

Many historic communities, such as Deadwood, South Dakota, have high wildfire risk.
Sherman St. in Deadwood, South Dakota, 1909. Source: Leeland Art Co. via Library of Congress

However, even with today’s building codes in place, historic downtowns remain susceptible, especially in counties with high wildfire risk. In many cases, the risk is compounded not only by flammable materials—such as the wooden sidewalks and building facades still in use in many towns in the American West—but also by structural densities. Densely built downtowns form a continuous wall, creating a feeling of enclosure and intimacy on the street, but adjoining buildings with shared wooden roofs and conjoined attics help fire spread more swiftly. Older town centers with narrow, historically charming streets are also difficult for fire trucks to navigate.

Once wildfire sweeps through a community, historic buildings that have been damaged are difficult and expensive to repair; those that have been destroyed are often irreplaceable. If a historic building is under the regulatory authority of a city, state, or federal agency, there may be limits on what kinds of materials can be used to restore it, and restoration may require specially trained professionals. Given that these unique sites cannot be easily or affordably recreated, investing in wildfire-resistant restoration is a sound strategy.

Adapting to fire, preserving history

Historic buildings and districts contribute significantly to local economies, particularly in rural communities, and preserving them is a high priority. As wildfire risk spreads and intensifies, many communities are reexamining how best to achieve this goal. In the effort to balance historical integrity and wildfire preparedness communities may face difficult decisions about tradeoffs. But the path forward is becoming clearer, especially as alternative materials continue to improve and offer both increased fire resistance and authentic appearance. Just as cities adapted to the risk of urban fires two centuries ago by updating building practices and installing fire hydrants, many communities today can adapt to wildfire risk and also preserve their cultural and architectural history.

Acknowledgements

Susan Riggs of Groundprint, LLC contributed knowledge and expertise to this research.

Ryan Maye Handy

  ryan@headwaterseconomics.org       505-310-2395

Ryan is a wildfire and land use expert for the Community Planning Assistance for Wildfire program. Her experience as an urban planner and former journalist brings invaluable insights to communities that must prepare for increasing wildfire risks.