Heavy wind forced all participating Burning Man camps to temporarily pause their builds. Some structures have suffered irreparable damage.
Early entry crews tasked with building the temporary city that will soon play host to this year’s edition of Burning Man were forced to stop working and wait for heavy wind to subside earlier this evening.
Videos circulating online show Nevada‘s Black Rock Desert obscured by whiteouts from the alkaline dust coating the dry lakebed’s surface. In some, shade cloth is being visibly torn from structures — if they’re still standing — with anyone running damage control wearing dust masks and goggles.
According to a sources on site, heavy gusts bent metal support poles on structures of theme camps like Pink Heart, BRC Snow Club, Disco Lips, and the Black Rock City Municipal Airport. The Burning Man Project did not immediately respond to an email asking if anyone had been injured as a result of the windstorm, or if any camps will be forced to rethink what they offer to this year’s attendees.
“The National Weather Service has issued a wind advisory for the area including Black Rock City,” reads a Burning Man statement issued at 8:22pm local time. “Wind gusts up to 45 MPH are expected this evening, causing severely decreased visibility throughout the city.”
Another reads, “The Gate into and out of Black Rock City is currently closed. Expect delays as the wind gusts continue and visibility fluctuates.” By 9:55pm local time, however, organizers reported that the gates had reopened.
On the Beaufort scale, 45 MPH gusts fall on the lower end of what constitutes gale force winds. At this speed, they can impede regular walking and break twigs and small branches off of trees.
Burning Man was first held on San Francisco’s Baker Beach in 1986, but a run-in with local law enforcement forced its organizers to relocated their annual gathering to the Black Rock Desert starting in 1991. The event is unique for its participation-based structure in which regular attendees provide most of its entertainment, with the 2025 edition alone boasting more than 1,100 registered theme camps.
Recent years have seen Burning Man mired by weather issues that — coupled with the post-pandemic economy — have contributed to lower attendance. In 2022, extreme heat wore on even the most seasoned Burners, and 2023 saw an unprecedented rainstorm force nearly everyone on site to stop and shelter in place.
The dusty surface of the Black Rock Desert has been softer than usual in recent months, likely exacerbating the effects of the windstorm. According to SFGATE, meteorologist Mark Deutschendorf has also said that rain and thunder could sweep across the playa “as soon as Sunday and Monday.”
For regular ticket holders, Burning Man runs from August 24 – September 1. This developing story will be updated as more information becomes available.