A city that has been battered throughout history with violent storms now stands in the way of another.

The Weather Channel forecasts the Greater Houston area, including all suburban zip codes, to get hit hard by 4 or 5 a.m. local time Tuesday morning.

Houston, just five years ago, had one of its worst floods in history after Hurricane Harvey dumped 60 inches of rain over two days in some areas.

The city is still trying to rebuild some areas after that hurricane, and many other rain events show just how vulnerable Houston is to flooding. Houstonians could wake up to more flooding Tuesday.

This happened as a tornado swept through town—just north of Austin—and damaged several homes.

Here is the video.

The line of storms continue north and east at a rate of 50 mph, and a new threat of tornado watches are in effect until 3 a.m. CT for most of East Texas and into Louisiana, southeast Oklahoma, and western Arkansas.

Just south of Dallas, the city of Corsicana got battered by a cell of the storm, and there were possible tornadoes along the I-45 corridor. That could mean towns like Fairfield and Centerville getting hit hard.

The storm will continue throughout East Texas until the morning, and Louisiana, Arkansas, and Oklahoma are under new tornado warnings.

Texas A&M University earlier today cancelled classes for Monday night in anticipation of the storm.

The storm was most recently in Somerville, but on a northeastern trek toward College Station, according to KBTX.

Storms north of the Brazos Valley are also moving northeastward, with tornado watches and warnings until 3 a.m. to be expected shortly, according to The Weather Channel.

KVUE in Austin has a live camera posted in Round Rock, and this short video shows the tornado approach and slam it.

Here’s another video taken from Round Rock on Monday, which got battered somewhat fiercely during the fast-moving storm.

Here are some of the recent reports from Texas and Oklahoma:

Multiple houses were reported damaged after a tornado touched down in the Austin suburb of Round Rock. A radar system was destroyed in Killeen, near Fort Hood, during heavy winds and possible tornado. A tornado was reported, and videoed, south of Elgin—which is east of Austin.

Homes were damaged, or possibly destroyed, during a tornado touchdown in Kingsbury, which is a small town northeast of San Antonio. There are reports of a tornado approximately 400 yards wide that destroyed many homes in Kingston, Oklahoma.

Jacksboro, which is northwest of Fort Worth, was the first to get hit by a tornado. Reports state that ceilings and walls collapsed at Jacksboro High School. Tornadoes were reported near the North Texas town of Bowie.

The line of storms are moving across the interstate from San Antonio all the way northward to the DFW Metroplex. The weather channel says that the city of Elgin, which is just east of Austin, is in a “particularly dangerous situation.

This particular storm is moving through Central Texas almost 25 years after ta powerful tornado decimated the town of Jarrell.