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Warming centers ready amid Metro Detroit cold snap
Warming centers are open around Detroit as temperatures dip to dangerous levels this week.
DETROIT (FOX 2) - As Metro Detroit approaches its coldest temperatures in seven years, the focus is on the wind chills.
VIEW: Detroit warming centers
While highs are forecasted to reach double digits this week, it feels much colder. On Tuesday morning, some areas of Southeast Michigan felt as cold as -15. If that sounds bad, unfortunately, it's going to get even worse.
A Winter Weather Advisory was issued for SE Michigan beginning at 3 a.m. and running until 1 p.m. Wednesday.
Between one to three inches of snow is expected with the highest amounts falling between I-94 and I-69, according to the National Weather Service.
Peak snowfall is expected to happen in Metro Detroit between 4 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Frigid weekend ahead
Friday begins the start of a polar vortex surge. Lows Friday will be sub-zero, while current models show -20 wind chills that afternoon.
Overnight into Saturday is when the most frigid air will grip the region. Currently, the forecast shows the potential for wind chills of -33.
This cold night leads into a weekend that doesn't feel much better. Highs Saturday are only forecasted to be in the single-digits before only slightly improving to the double digits Sunday.
A model showing forecasted wind chills for Friday, Jan. 23 into Saturday, Jan. 24
For the latest forecast, live radar, and more, download the FOX 2 Weather app.
Big picture view:
The weekend is expected to be the coldest weather in Metro Detroit since January 2019, when lows reached -14. That was the actual temperature – not the wind chill.
According to National Weather Service (NWS) data, it will certainly feel bitter outside, but it likely won't be record-breaking, as negative double-digit temperatures, not wind chills, would be needed to set records.
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