At 210-feet underground, a stay in this Arizona hotel room included unrestricted access to an ancient cave system. Why new owners closed it for good.
For 16 years, visitors could sleep in a suite inside a giant cave near the Grand Canyon. Now, it's being dismantled.
PEACH SPRINGS, AZ — Located more than 200 feet below the surface near Peach Springs, the Grand Canyon Caverns and Inn offers visitors a rare underground experience filled with natural wonders and ...
SELIGMAN, AZ (AZFamily) — Twenty-one stories deep and about a mile off of old Route 66 sits the Grand Canyon Caverns. Formed over 15 million years ago, they were discovered in 1927, and tours began in ...
Grand Canyon National Park is temporarily closing its in-park hotels and lodges. The closure is caused by a series of breaks in the Transcanyon Waterline, which supplies water to the park. Guests with ...
A waterline break has forced the Grand Canyon's South Rim to temporarily halt overnight lodging. The suspension of overnight stays begins Dec. 6 and will continue for the foreseeable future.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The world's deepest, darkest and quietest hotel room is gone for good. Staff at Grand Canyon Caverns, the roadside attraction in ...
Staff at Grand Canyon Caverns, the roadside attraction in Peach Springs near the Hualapai Indian Reservation, announced on March 2 that its Caverns Suite is permanently closed.