Gordon Ramsay's £7million mansion in south west London had an extremely lucky escape as Storm Eunice swept through his neighbourhood.
The ferocious storm, with winds reaching more than 75mph in the capital, uprooted a huge tree outside of his lavish home.
The tree appeared to cause damage as it crashed into a brick wall outside of his neighbours' properties.
It means two of Gordon's neighbours will have to tackle the damage made to their wall.
The potty-mouthed telly chef regularly shares sneak peeks inside his family home, including his £4.4million country pad in Cornwall.
The star faced backlash from neighbours after relocating to his Cornish residence just before lockdown rules prohibited it - but locals accused him of bringing the virus to their doors.
The telly star snapped up the five-bedroom holiday home in 2015, and at the time it was the second most expensive sale in Cornwall.
Gordon is set to make his TV comeback this year with a new cookery show called Future Food Stars – which carries the cheeky, and very Gordon-appropriate, nickname FFS.
The show is said to emulate The Apprentice and will follow 12 food entrepreneurs battling for investment from the F Word star.
The show hasn’t even started airing yet but has already been greenlit for a second season on the BBC, while the rights to broadcast the show in the USA have already been bought by the Fox network in a reported “multimillion pound deal.”
A show source has opened up about the exciting new project, telling The Sun on Sunday: “Gordon’s super-excited, as it’s the first time that he’s had a programme like this on television in the UK as well as the US, with Fox and the BBC at the same time – it’s a big deal for him.
“He is very much looking forward to filming Stateside in the new year, where he has a home, and investing in the show’s winning US entrepreneur to add to his American portfolio.
“Beeb producers are all very excited — the challenges on the series are pretty epic, plus the personalities of all the contestants are huge.
“Mix that in with American-style cinematography and it feels much bigger and fresher than most telly shows on the box at the moment.”