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==Coventry tornado== | ==Coventry tornado== | ||
After the Birmingham, UK storm dissipated another tornado formed in the city of Coventry. The tornado did very localised damage and was rated EF1 on the Fujita scale with winds in excess of 95 mph. It formed over the Walsgrave and Stoke areas before dissipating over Willenhall. | After the Birmingham, UK storm dissipated another tornado formed in the city of Coventry.{{citation needed}} The tornado did very localised damage and was rated EF1 on the Fujita scale with winds in excess of 95 mph. It formed over the Walsgrave and Stoke areas before dissipating over Willenhall. | ||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 03:14, 4 June 2010
This article refers to a tornado in Birmingham, UK.Birmingham Tornado.
Damage caused by the Birmingham tornado | |
Duration | - |
---|---|
Tornadoes confirmed | 2 |
Max. rating | F2 tornado |
Fatalities | 0 |
Damage | £40 million |
Areas affected | Birmingham,CoventryEngland |
Most severe tornado damage; see Enhanced Fujita scale |
The Birmingham Tornado was one of the strongest tornadoes recorded in the United Kingdom in nearly 30 years, occurring on 28 July 2005 in the suburbs of Birmingham. It formed on a day when strong tornadoes were expected to develop across the Midlands and eastern England. The tornado struck at approximately 2.30pm BST in the Sparkbrook area of the city, also affecting King's Heath, Moseley and Balsall Heath as it carved a kilometre-long path through the city. Its main effects were felt in the Ladypool Road which bore the brunt of the damage. Ladypool Primary School was extensively damaged and lost its distinctive Martin & Chamberlain tower. The adjacent St Agatha's Church also suffered some damage. Christ Church (consecrated 1867), on the corner of Dolobran Road and Grantham Road in Sparkbrook was also damaged and has now been demolished.
The Met Office and TORRO (The Tornado and Storm Research Organisation) has estimated that the tornado had a general T4 rating on the TORRO scale with a short spell as a T5 tornado, which would mean wind speeds between 93 and 130 mph, equivalent to an F2 on the Fujita scale.
There were no fatalities, although there were approximately 19 injuries, three of which were reported to be serious. The tornado uprooted an estimated 1000 trees, removed the roofs of buildings, picked up and deposited cars and caused other damage during its short existence. The total cost of damage has been put at £40 million, making it the most costly tornado in British history.
While the United Kingdom has more reported tornadoes, relative to its land area, than any other country excluding the Netherlands, the vast majority are weak. The strongest recorded tornado in the country struck Portsmouth on December 14, 1810 with a T8 (F4) rating and a top wind speed of 213 to 240 mph.
Second tornado
Three months later, strong winds and driving rain brought a second tornado, which hit less than a mile away from the original twister. The Met Office said there were winds of up to 80mph and it was strong enough to rip the roof off a corner house. Following this came widespread flooding across the region which brought havoc to Birmingham.
Coventry tornado
After the Birmingham, UK storm dissipated another tornado formed in the city of Coventry. The tornado did very localised damage and was rated EF1 on the Fujita scale with winds in excess of 95 mph. It formed over the Walsgrave and Stoke areas before dissipating over Willenhall.
See also
- List of tornadoes and tornado outbreaks
- List of European tornadoes and tornado outbreaks
- Climate of the United Kingdom
References
- Indymedia UK - After the tornado: "market forces" force demolition of Sparkbrook Church
- Ecclesiastical Law Society
External links
- BBC Birmingham Site
- BBC Birmingham - Pictures by the public
- - Photographs taken on 28th July 2005 - Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive
- Birmingham City Council tornado page
- The Balti Triangle Back in Business (photos)
- Forward - Birmingham City Council newspaper