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Still Sweltering: The Areas of Disney’s Wilderness Lodge Where the AC Outage Refuses to End

Spacious lodge interior with high ceilings, large wooden beams, and chandeliers. The room features wooden furniture, vibrant rugs, and ornate pillars. A mezzanine level overlooks the scene, adding to the rustic ambiance.
Credit: Disney

A premium summer vacation at a Walt Disney World Deluxe Resort is supposed to offer a crisp, cool sanctuary from the brutal Florida sun. Instead, for many families stranded at Disney’s Wilderness Lodge, the trip has turned into a waiting game against a multi-day mechanical crisis.

A rustic lodge with a triangular roof stands in the background, surrounded by lush greenery. In the foreground, a waterfall cascades over large rocks into a serene pool, creating a picturesque scene.
Credit: Disney

The resort’s catastrophic central air conditioning failure has officially entered its fourth consecutive day. With a fierce National Weather Service Heat Advisory driving real-feel temperatures across Orlando to a hazardous 111°F, the stakes couldn’t be higher. While engineering crews have finally scored major mechanical breakthroughs, the property has transformed into a deeply divided resort—leaving some guests resting in comfort while others continue to battle the heat.

The Haves: Copper Creek and Boulder Ridge Are Fully Restored

Late Saturday night, a wave of relief hit the Disney Vacation Club (DVC) sectors of the property. Crews working around the clock successfully isolated and repaired the cooling loop servicing the Copper Creek Villas. As of Sunday morning, June 21, 2026, the air conditioning there is officially fully functional, with vents blasting cold air and bringing room climates back down to standard, livable levels.

wilderness lodge pool disney
Credit: Disney Parks

Similarly, the neighboring Boulder Ridge Villas continue to operate flawlessly on their own independent cooling infrastructure, which completely bypassed the technical disaster from day one.

The Have-Nots: Why the Outage Persists in the Main Lodge

Unfortunately, the nightmare isn’t over for travelers lodged in the hotel’s standard main building. While Disney has deployed a massive fleet of temporary, industrial-sized commercial AC trailers around the perimeter of the flagship building, the main lodge remains stuck in a frustrating, partial recovery phase.

A statue of a man and a mouse stands in a garden near a castle, with clear blue skies overhead. A sign nearby reads "CAUTION! EXTREME HEAT DANGER," indicating potential weather hazards in the area. The scene has that magical Disney theme park charm.
Credit: Inside The Magic

Some guest rooms have successfully stabilized, but dozens of others remain stalled in the high 70s and low 80s due to a complex physical phenomenon known as heat soak.

The Physics of the Thermal Load: The iconic, 82-foot grand lobby and its surrounding guest wings are constructed from massive Pacific Northwest old-growth timbers, heavy stone columns, and dense concrete foundations. Having sat without climate control for over 72 hours in triple-digit weather, these dense structural materials have acted like giant thermal batteries, absorbing the intense heat.

Even though emergency HVAC units are actively forcing cold air through the ventilation shafts, the building’s log-and-stone framework is radiating that stored heat right back into the rooms. Overcoming this internal thermal load is a slow, multi-day battle, meaning the cavernous common spaces still feel heavily humid and stagnant.

App Verification: High-Profile Restaurants Stage a Comeback

The clearest sign that the emergency cooling trailers are gaining ground can be found right on the My Disney Experience app.

A person dressed as a fairy-tale character interacts with a family dining in a restaurant. The setting is decorated with twinkling lights and trees. The family includes two adults and two children, and there's a server holding a tray.
Credit: Disney Tips

On Friday and Saturday, the intense interior heat forced a total operational shutdown of the main building’s premium table-service dining infrastructure. However, Sunday morning brought a dramatic reversal. The app has officially reopened advanced dining reservations for its core eateries, signaling that kitchen and dining room climates have successfully stabilized:

  • Whispering Canyon Cafe: The family-style restaurant located right off the main lobby is back on the digital grid, accepting same-day bookings and walk-up waitlists.
  • Storybook Dining at Artist Point with Snow White: The flagship character dining experience, which was completely dark on Saturday night, has unlocked reservation inventory for Sunday evening.

Wilderness Lodge Real-Time Outage Tracker

Resort Area / AmenityCurrent A/C StatusSunday Operational Reality
Copper Creek Villas (DVC)Fully FunctionalClimate control is fully restored; rooms are successfully cooling.
Boulder Ridge Villas (DVC)Fully FunctionalOperating normally on a completely separate, unaffected cooling loop.
Main Lodge Guest RoomsOngoing Outage / Partial FixIndustrial units are active but battling severe structural heat soak. Many rooms still hover in the 78°F–82°F range.
Grand Log LobbyCritically WarmHigh ceilings and massive open volume are trapping humidity and heat.
Whispering Canyon CafeOpen (Per App)Table-service dining restored; reservations live on My Disney Experience.
Storybook Dining at Artist PointOpen (Per App)Character dinners scheduled to resume Sunday evening; inventory unlocked.

What Arriving Guests Should Do Next

Disney Guests Cellphone
Credit: Disney

If your travel plans involve checking into Disney’s Wilderness Lodge today or tomorrow, exercise caution. Complete your digital check-in via the app as early as possible. If your room assignment falls within the fully restored Copper Creek or Boulder Ridge wings, your vacation should proceed seamlessly. However, if you are assigned to a room in the main lodge building, call Disney Guest Services before arriving to verify if your specific block is still affected by the ongoing outage. Stay hydrated, stay flexible, and keep tracking updates as the Wilderness Lodge slowly thaws out.

About Rick Lye

Rick is an avid Disney fan. He first went to Disney World in 1986 with his parents and has been hooked ever since. Rick is married to another Disney fan and is in the process of turning his two children into fans as well. When he is not creating new Disney adventures, he loves to watch the New York Yankees and hang out with his dog, Buster. In the fall, you will catch him cheering for his beloved NY Giants.

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