Last May, Colorado’s Hanging Lake Trail closed ahead of a $4.5 million, 100-year restoration project. Almost a year later, reservations are finally open for hikers to book their timed entry slots starting July 1.
Hanging Lake is a National Natural Landmark and one of Colorado’s most popular hiking destinations. However, due to high visitation through the 2010s, damage sustained during the Grizzly Creek wildfire in 2020, and subsequent floods in 2021 and 2023, the trail needed revitalization. Bridges needed to be rebuilt, flood debris needed to be removed, and better infrastructure was required to sustain the number of annual hikers.

The National Forest Foundation (NFF), the City of Glenwood Springs, Get Outside Colorado (GOCO), Colorado Lottery, Colorado Parks and Wildlife, and the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) partnered to make this restoration project possible.
“We want to facilitate a visitor experience and make sure that as many people are able to enjoy this trail as possible. And we also want to protect the resources that are there along with it,” Emily Kasyon, White River National Forest program coordinator for the NFF, told GearJunkie when we covered the story last spring. “And I think this trail design really gets at that.”

Hanging Lake 100-Year Restoration Project

Reserve Your Hike at Hanging Lake

