Britain is being pummelled by 80mph gales and torrential rain as people are told 'do not travel' as roads and railways are closed in the aftermath of Storm Eowyn.
A new weather front has arrived in the South West and will move northwards across England and Wales during Sunday amid further wind and rain warnings in the wake of Storm Eowyn
Footage shows the red-bricked property dating back to the 1900s collapsing in the village of Hale, Greater Manchester, on Saturday after cracks appeared in its walls late last week.
Britain is still being battered by 75mph gales and heavy rain after Storm Eowyn wreaked havoc across the country - with bad weather forecast for another three days.
Louise Haggarty was leaving her home in Wrexham to take her nine-year-old daughter, Lily, to school just moments before the metal shed hurled through the air outside their home.
The hurricane-force gusts from Storm Eowyn will continue to strike into this evening with a rare red warning in place until 5pm in Scotland and an amber warning running until 6am tomorrow.
Brave scientists on a 'hurricane hunting' plane that is used to study the world's most lethal tempests are preparing to fly into Storm Eowyn as it roars towards Britain.