suffered significant damage to its roof following high winds caused by Storm Eunice. Winds caused by the adverse weather shredded parts of the white-domed roof of the venue, which is located near Greenwich, South East London.
19.02.2022 - 12:19 / manchestereveningnews.co.uk
Travel disruption caused by Storm Eunice will continue into Saturday as the clean-up begins from the deadly storm.
Many train services will remain suspended on Saturday morning and 'do not travel' notices have been reissued for a number of services, according to National Rail Enquiries.
National Rail said “routes across most of Great Britain” remain affected.
A do not travel notice was reissued for the Southern, Thameslink and Great Northern networks for Saturday morning where some routes are expected not to reopen until the afternoon.
Northern has shared a series of tweets about disrupted services.
Due to damage to the overhead electric wires between Macclesfield and Stoke-On-Trent, the line is blocked and therefore trains cancelled, with a replacement rail in place.
They also advised passengers to not travel to or from Preston, as services remain disrupted.
CrossCountry Trains has asked passengers not to travel on Saturday “following cancelled strike action”.
The provider wrote on Twitter: “Saturday 19 February - a severely amended and reduced timetable operates. Do not travel today.”
Manchester Piccadilly advised travellers to check with National Rail for enquiries this morning, asking passengers to stay 'safe, be patient, and kind'.
Meanwhile, South Western Railway expects significant disruption across their network in the morning, while Great Western Railway and Greater Anglia services are suspended until approximately 10am.
Passengers are still being asked to avoid travelling where possible.
As of early Saturday morning the National Rail website still listed no services for: Avanti West Coast, Chiltern Railways, Grand Central, Great Western Railway, Greater Anglia, Heathrow Express, South Western Railway, Stansted
suffered significant damage to its roof following high winds caused by Storm Eunice. Winds caused by the adverse weather shredded parts of the white-domed roof of the venue, which is located near Greenwich, South East London.
Dave has been forced to postpone his upcoming London shows at The O2 due to the damage the venue suffered this week at the hands of Storm Eunice.The rapper was due to perform at the venue on Monday (February 21) and Tuesday (22) as part of his ‘We’re All Alone In This Together’ UK tour.However, winds caused by the adverse weather conditions shredded parts of the white-domed roof of The O2, which is located near Greenwich in South East London.Posting on Twitter, Dave wrote: “Bad news, The O2 have told us Monday and Tuesday’s shows can’t happen. (Storm/roof) we’re doing everything we can to reschedule the shows to play as soon as possible.“Have been told it won’t be too long I’ll know more on Monday and will return with a tweet then..
The O2 suffered significant damage to its roof following high winds.The storm caused severe disruption and damage to numerous part of the UK, with the Met Office issuing a red warning for wind – the highest level – for London, the South East and parts of the east of England.Winds caused by the adverse weather shredded parts of the white-domed roof of The O2, which is located near Greenwich in south-east London.Dome update – six panels shredded and counting ! pic.twitter.com/p2AVhf17Ly— Ben Hubbard (@BJFHubbard) February 18, 2022The O2 will remain closed for The WeekendUpdated information for The O2 and upcoming shows will be available on our website https://t.co/HR1mpE3EhpStay safe and take care— The O2 (@TheO2) February 19, 2022In a statement, the venue confirmed that the venue will remain closed this weekend while “urgent repairs” take place to the roof.“Due to adverse weather conditions, we can confirm that there has been some damage caused to the tent fabric in our roof at The O2.“The affected areas have been cleared and The O2 will remain closed tomorrow morning whilst urgent repairs take place.”An AP Dhillion show that was due to take place at indigo at The O2 has been rescheduled to February 22.
Storm Eunice has blown down a large street at Stacey Solomon and Joe Swash’s £1.2 million Essex home. A red weather warning was issued across the UK on Friday 18 February as Storm Eunice threatened to bring winds of up to 90mph.
Storm Eunice caused chaos across Greater Manchester, with trains suspended, roads blocked and buildings taking a battering.
A shopping centre in Salford has been closed due to Storm Eunice.
Trees have been felled across Greater Manchester as Storm Eunice causes damage and disruption.
A fallen tree has caused a power outage on the train lines near Stockport as Storm Eunice batters the region.