Delta Goodrem joined thousands of other Los Angeles residents who evacuated their homes to escape the raging fires this past week.
The Australian singer, 40, took to Instagram to update her followers on the safety of herself and fiancé Matthew Copley who split their time between Sydney and LA.
Sharing an image of the inferno engulfing the Hollywood Hills, the hitmaker said she and her partner had to ‘temporarily evacuate’ their home in the City of Angels.
‘I love this beautiful city. It has always been a home away from home for me,’ she captioned the disturbing image.
‘My heart is broken and the feeling in the smoke-filled air is devastating. Praying for everyone.’
In the next slide, she wrote: ‘It’s difficult to even start with the words to truly express the emotions so many are feeling right now.’
Delta Goodrem, 40, (pictured) joined thousands of other Los Angeles residents who evacuated their homes to escape the raging fires this past week
‘I am so grateful for all your messages of support checking in. We had to temporarily evacuate but we are OK,’ she continued.
‘On a journey with everyone here and deeply saddened to see this beautiful city in such a devastating way.
‘My thoughts, love and strength are with everyone dealing with the unimaginable right now.’
It’s unclear if Delta and Matthew have since been able to return to their home, or just how close their property is to surrounding fires.
Daily Mail Australia has reached out to Delta’s representatives for further comment.
It comes as thousands more Los Angeles residents fled their homes on Sunday as the deadly Palisades Fire threatens to engulf two more neighbourhoods.
Fresh evacuation orders were issued as the flames threatened the celebrity-studded Brentwood and Mandeville Canyon areas .
Footage from earlier today shows at least one house ablaze in the canyon and massive clouds of smoke billowing near Sepulveda Pass at Highway 405.
As thousands of residents in the City of Angels continue to evacuate, multiple drivers on Sunset Boulevard, located south of Mandeville Canyon, have reported being stuck in a gridlock.
The Australian singer took to Instagram to update her followers on the safety of herself and fiancé Matthew Copley who split their time between Sydney and LA
One distressed woman remained stuck in unmoving traffic for two hours while heading toward a fire station to drop off donated goods for firefighters, according to ABC.
‘There was a visibility when I first got here, a little bit of blue sky, and it has unfolded to absolutely ugliness,’ she told the publication.
Firefighters and helicopters have also been seen circling the area and making massive water drops as the 22,660-acre fire continues to spread.
The hellish flames have already claimed the lives of about 11 people while burning over 37,000 acres of land and destroying 12,000 structures in its wake.
At least 13 people remain missing, according to officials.
In total, about 153,000 residents are under mandatory evacuation orders and about 57,000 structures remain at risk.
Several off-ramps to the 405 Freeway including Getty Center Drive, Skirball Center Drive, Sunset, Wilshire, Santa Monica and Olympic boulevards have been closed in order to limit traffic in the West Los Angeles area.
According to state authority Cal Fire , there are at least six fires currently burning, with the Palisades fire being the largest.
Sharing an image of the inferno engulfing the Hollywood Hills, the hitmaker said she and her partner Matthew Copley (right) had to ‘temporarily evacuate’ their home in the City of Angels
The spread of flames has forced thousands more to evacuate from their homes in the upscale Brentwood and Encino suburbs where several celebrities, such as LeBron James , Arnold Schwarzenegger and Kamala Harris , own homes.
‘I pray this nightmare ends soon! So many prayers’, James, who purchased his lavish Brentwood pad in 2017 for $23 million, tweeted over night.
Former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Brentwood mansion is also under threat as LA authorities declared a local health emergency over night for the whole county due to poor air quality.
LA County Public Health issued a public health order, stating that the fires had ‘severely degraded air quality’ that poses ‘immediate and long-term risks to public health’.
As airplanes continue dropping fire retardant in Mandeville Canyon, aiming to create a defensive barrier around homes, federal agents remain on the lookout for fire starters.
Earlier this morning, Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonnell announced that the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives will be taking the lead in investigating the exact cause of the fires.
The ATF will serve as lead agency of a newly formed Los Angeles Regional Wildfire Investigative Task Force—a team of local, state and federal agencies that will ‘investigate the cause of these fires and to see if there’s any connection between them.’
‘They have tremendous resources and expertise and can bring in resources from across the country to do their investigation.
‘So we’re very thankful for them and their resources,’ the Chief said.
The National Weather Service has warned that locally strong Santa Ana winds – the nemesis of firefighters – could soon return.
Those winds have been blamed for turning wildfires into infernos that levelled entire neighbourhoods in the LA area, where there has been no significant rainfall in more than eight months.