At least three people in Japan have been killed, after Typhoon Lan slammed into the island on Monday.
Tens of thousands of people have also been forced to evacuate, after what was previously a fierce Category 4 storm made landfall in the Shizuoka prefecture, which lies to the south-west of Tokyo.
The country experienced winds of up to 198km/h (123mph), according to Japan's official weather agency.
SEE ALSO: The strongest storm on Earth right now is heading for JapanFootage captured by some social media users across Japan show the impact of the typhoon:
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駅の1Fが水没、2Fへ避難。近鉄の駅員さんたちは大変な中、働き続けてくれています。 pic.twitter.com/LVyqbwHBKw
— アソボデザイン(トミナガハルキ) (@asobodesign) October 22, 2017
Even vehicles were not spared.
A train in Japan's Yokohama city was on Monday morning hit by lightning, causing it to breakdown, and for smoke to start filling into its carriages.
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According to twitter user @sotetsu_akb, passengers were only evacuated after 15 minutes of waiting onboard the train. Thankfully, nobody was injured.
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Astronaut Paolo Nespoli, who was onboard the Cupola module of the International Space Station, had also hours before tweeted pictures of Typhoon Lan as seen from space, as it made its way towards Japan.
The typhoon has weakened to a category 2 storm before making landfall, and was moving northeast of Tokyo on Monday afternoon.
It is expected to become a tropical depression by Tuesday.
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