News RSS Feed


Tornado injures six and damages 100 homes in London

3:05pm Thursday 7th December 2006

comment Comments (23)   Have your say »


A FREAK tornado ripped through a residential area of the capital, tearing apart buildings and injuring six people.

The fleeting storm ripped tiles off roofs, pulled down fences and shattered windows as it hit Kensal Rise, in north-west London, at 11am this morning.

Were you in Kensal Rise when the tornado struck? Send your photos to 07834 487010 or email them to newsdesk@london.newsquest.co.uk

The tornado was thought to have lasted less than a minute but the gusts in excess of 110 miles per hour left a trail of devastation along Chamberlayne Road.

Fifteen-year-old Gavin Driscoll was thrown against a shop window with so much force that it shattered, while local resident Ed Solomons thought "it was the end of the world, right here in Kensal Rise".

PICTURE GALLERY

"I came out of AP Food & Wine, and I saw this thing coming," said Gavin, who lives in nearby Bathurst Gardens. "It picked me up and threw me right against the store window.

"I broke the window, man," he told Local London. "Look at my ear, it is still swollen."

One man, believed to be in his 50s, suffered a serious head injury and was taken to Central Middlesex Hospital.

Five people were treated at the scene for minor injuries and shock.

'I thought it was Armageddon'

Pat Cassidy was at home in Chamberlayne Road when disaster struck a few houses away. "First we heard thunder. There was lighting and I could hear the rain.

"Then I heard this very, very loud noise, like a truck passing close to the window. But then I could feel that maybe it wasn't a truck, it was something else.

"So when I came out about two or tree minutes later, I saw the whole street was stopped and there were lots of debris on the road. And everyone was out of there houses standing around."

His friend, Mr Solomons, was caught up in the tornado on the sidewalk just across the road.

"He said he saw this funnel of destruction, this black funnel of destruction rolling towards them," Mr Cassidy said.

"He got knocked on to the street. He was shocked. He thought it was Armageddon. He thought it was the end of the world, right here in Kensal Rise."

"We were lucky, we were unscathed."

The winds caused structural damage to buildings, cars and street furniture, a Scotland Yard spokeswoman said.

London Fire and Rescue confirmed that about 100 homes were damaged.

Eleven fire engines, about 50 firefighters, four ambulances and an emergency helicopter rushed to the scene.

Brent Council said the roof of a swimming pool at Manor School in Kensal Rise was ripped off but children were inside at the time and none were injured.

'Strongest in 50 years'

A Met Office spokesman said the tornado was one of the strongest ever seen in the UK.

Unlike the US, which uses the Fujita Tornado Damage Scale, the Met ranks tornadoes on the Tornado Intensity Scale from T0 to T10.

Today's tornado was ranked as a T4 on the T-Scale, which the spokesman said was considered "strong" and "at the upper end of the scale".

The ranking is determined by wind speed and the amount of damage caused.

It is not known when a tornado last struck the capital, but the Met said Central and Southern England were the most susceptible to tornadoes.

The tornado was created when an intense shower squall moved east over London.

The storm is now passing over the North Sea, but the Met said a second squall would hit the capital this afternoon.

The spokesman said the UK did not have a tornado warning system because the twisters were so hard to predict.

The Tornado and Storm Research Organisation (Torro) said there was still a risk of isolated tornadoes across central and southern England this afternoon.

TORRO deputy director Terence Meaden said it was the strongest tornado to hit London in more than half a century.

A tornado with winds of up to 200 miles an hour ripped through Gunnersbury in west London in 1954.

For its land area, the U.K. has more tornadoes annually - about 33 - than any other place in the world, Mr Meaden said.

'Stay away'

Meanwhile Brent Council warned people to stay away from the area "due to possible flying debris for the foreseeable future".

Tree and building experts were assessing the damage while contractors removed fallen trees and debris, the council added.

College Road, Hardinge Road, Leighton Gardens, Liddell Gardens, Whitmore Gardens, Leigh Gardens, Clifford Gardens, Chamberlayne Road between Leighton/Clifford Gardens, Okehampton Road, Crediton Road, Dundonald Road, Wrentham Road and Tiverton Road remain closed off.

Residents have taken shelter at the Church of the Transfiguration in Chamberlayne Road and at Legion Hall on Albert Road.

Anyone who has been left homeless is being instructed to report there.

  • For advice and information residents can call Brent Council's helpline, 0208 9375255.


Your Say YourThis Is Local London

erin, says...
2:20pm Thu 7 Dec 06

what has happened in north london is scary. it was only this morning that i looked out my window and skies turnt black. i live in south london, could a tornado hit here? what about our children and our families? i feel very sorry for those whose houses got ripped, as it is christmas in under 3 weeks. what a way to celebrate it huh?

Darren, says...
2:25pm Thu 7 Dec 06

It sad to think... the Uk doesn't have any warning system... becuz this is like the 5th one this week.. google it.. one in wales... 2 reports in scotland. this and irland... A city shoudln't have these... UK has got a few month ahead of some bad weather... :(

Daniel Booth, says...
2:36pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Darren wrote:
It sad to think... the Uk doesn't have any warning system... becuz this
is like the 5th one this week.. google it.. one in wales... 2 reports
in scotland. this and irland... A city shoudln't have these... UK has
got a few month ahead of some bad weather... :(
We do actualy have warning system.

Weather experts put the south on tornado alert after a twister ripped through part of Hampshire.

The Tornado and Storm Research Organisation (Torro) issued a warning of isolated severe thunderstorms or weak tornadoes over the next few days.

I believe that Basingstoke also got hit last night by a mini-Tornado around the area near the train station.
There are broken street lamps and tree debris everywhere.


Ash, says...
2:42pm Thu 7 Dec 06

I used to live in Harlesden, and I'm very concerned.

Tracey, says...
2:49pm Thu 7 Dec 06

OMG I live in the next street along from Chamberlayne.

Sammi, says...
3:07pm Thu 7 Dec 06

i feel really bad for the people who live there. Can the tornado hit anywhere else today or tommorow. i live in oxford can it travel to us?

Laura, says...
3:13pm Thu 7 Dec 06

It makes you wander what will be next? Are we goning to have increasingly bad weather from now on? I hope all the injured people are ok, I live in Oxford, are we going to have such bad luck as the people in London?

brad, says...
3:18pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Having grown up in Missouri and Kansas in the States, and seen more than a few of these, I would say to everybody not to panic about one hitting where you live. Tornadoes are unfortunate for those affected. But they're a really random event and the damage is usually very local, as you can see. We once had over 80 in one day over an area the size of Britain including several cities and only a few people actually were affected. Just be thankful you don't get hurricanes!

Flash, says...
3:48pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Were any pigeons hurt?

concerned, says...
4:07pm Thu 7 Dec 06

well i live in east london and we luckly have never had a tornado or anything hit us could it possibly travel to us? as north london is close to us
quote

MinisterOfMagic, says...
4:14pm Thu 7 Dec 06

I'd like to apologize to all Muggles for the recent spat of tornadoes. Rest assured I will do everything in my power to arrest those responsible...erm..I mean fix the weather. I do wish Dumbledore was here...

Lorraine, says...
4:51pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Thats Mother Nature for you,I can't help but think it is all due to the way our world is changing...I do hope no animals were hurt :(

dave, says...
5:00pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Sammi wrote:
i feel really bad for the people who live there. Can the tornado hit
anywhere else today or tommorow. i live in oxford can it travel to us?
Sammi, I just heard a report that an even stronger tornado has touched down and at this very minute is wreaking havoc on its way to Oxford, if I were you I would "RUN, Run Like the Wind", watch out for low flying cows too!

Take care, best of luck!

Linda, says...
5:10pm Thu 7 Dec 06

It's really scary that this will problem be a common phenomenum in the future owing to global warming

Janie, says...
5:11pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Yes Brad...
I'm from South Carolina and I know what you mean about the hurricanes. I did Hugo in '89 on a barrier island.

Anyway... to the point.
The folks in the area are in our prayers. When it hits you you feel very alone. Please don't. There are people all over the world praying for you.
God Bless...
Jane


Janie, says...
5:11pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Hey... you are in our prayers... Tornados are very serious business.
Y'all are in our prayers here in South Carolina.
Janie

robert, says...
5:16pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Linda wrote:
It's really scary that this will problem be a common phenomenum in the future owing to global warming
Linda, this had nothing to do with global warming. On average the UK experiences the most tornado's of any nation worldwide, 99.9% of them dont cause damage, its just nature, dont read the doom and gloom merchants rants into the working of the world.

Its nature at work, maybe a little scary if your involved but dont imagine that driving an electric car would stop tornados happening. The Earth throughout its history has had major temperature fluctuations, indeed almost all the plant life here evolved in a much warmer carbon dioxide rich atmosphere, SO STOP WORRYING!

Nikita, says...
6:25pm Thu 7 Dec 06

where was thetornadoactuall at?

Expendable, says...
6:29pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Why you are all so surprised and panicking about the weather? We are the true creators of it and our creations is simply letting us know about its existence, which we refuse to acknowledge and the refusal is disastrous consequences such us we have seen today in London, but tornado doesn’t care how many loved one it took, how many lives it broke or as Erin said earlier: “…it is Christmas in under 3 weeks”, climate is like a kid – once unsupervised and unappreciated, becomes a disaster.
I never thought it could happen, I never seen roof tile of My house taking a flight lessons... Well, joking doesn’t help much, I am afraid todays event is not the last one yet, there will be more pain, more than one can hold. Storms will be more and more violent each year, I guess not once in our live time we should see disasters in much larger scale. The good news is that we might just make it to die natural peaceful death, but I am afraid we would have to wish our children good luck leaving our deeds in their hands. Everything possible, everything is changeable the bad news is that someone have to do it, indeed someone, who would like to go and be the first one to annoy others about pollutions, CO2 level, global warming? Anybody? Me? Why should I? There is nothing I have left… nothing but this bottle of scotch.
Marry Christmas everybody

harry, says...
6:34pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Expendable, are you insane? Do you really think that tornados are made by man? try googling for "london tornado 1950".

It happens all the time, you green freaks worry me more than the weather!

darsy, says...
7:39pm Thu 7 Dec 06

I've a feeling we're not in Kensal anymore, Toto

Fran, says...
9:11pm Thu 7 Dec 06

omg i cant believe this has happened. i hope my boyfriends dad is okai! glad he wasnt visiting him. i feel so sorry for everyone who was in it. love to everyone who was in it xxxx

Expendable, says...
10:47pm Thu 7 Dec 06

Green freaks? How there you to judge color of my eyes? I am neither green nor yellow, I am just a theoretical physicist who happened to experience extraordinary phenomenon which left for him "every night nightmares" kind memories. Time heals good, but not good enough without scotch. My personal interest in this post is to find how do you act and how you do you respond comparing it to my personal experience. I am, frankly, I didn’t do anything, would you? No? Oh well not much difference from what I decide in my live, so topic closed, face the consequences. I am not worry about myself I live quite live now, no friends, no family, there will be no one after me anymore, at least not in my blood line, you are the one who should care, you are the one who have children and wife’s, friends, you are the one should do something about it…
quit smoking before getting a cancer, imagine how senseless it is afterwards.
And the greenpeace, no offence, they just do their job, however nobody told them how to do it right and how to report for every penny was spend for rescuing species from extinction which not many of us ever seen in our live. Makes a lot of sense isn't it? Let’s start fixing the problem from the end, by fixing extinction we fix climate, just great. I never gave a penny to this organization, do you realy believe that 5 pound per month would change the world?

Tornado by the way is not creation of human being, I never said it otherwise, but altering it is very much like a human creation. We make and keep on making gorges valuable for economy factories and driving nice powerful cars (some of us do, no offence), and I not even talking about those, correct me if I am wrong, 2000 nuclear tests in 20th century. Well, weather does change, take alook for weather forecast history from year 1900 to year 2000. Temperature is rising, especialy for the past 20 to 30 years you may notice significant difference, remember the recent Florida disaster? The god **** or shell I better say human **** tornado announced to be just level F0 – F1, but what we got? Would it be the same if it wouldn’t be so hot back then, would it be the same if water be colder and wouldn’t boost the tornado velocity?

So what to do? I don’t know I am here with prissily same question.

Comments are closed on this article.

Images from Sky News showed the trail of destruction left by the tornado (Pic: Sky) Houses and cars were destroyed by the T4 tornado (Pic: Sky) Eight families have been put in temporary accommodation and face an uncertain Christmas (Pic: Martina Smit) Police cordoned off most of the streets in the area. (Pic: Martina Smit)

Images from Sky News showed the trail of destruction left by the tornado (Pic: Sky)

Houses and cars were destroyed by the T4 tornado (Pic: Sky)

About 100 houses were damaged in the storm (Pic: Martina Smit)

Police cordoned off most of the streets in the area. (Pic: Martina Smit)



Sponsored Links


Local Information

Enter your postcode, town or place name

House prices »   Schools »   Crime »   Hospitals »