That would depend very much on if and how it was anchored to the pad.
cold winds
No, though it is close. Winds of 74 mph or greater are considered hurricane force.
The winds on Venus are about 300 mph
The velocity of the winds blowing at 89 miles per hour during a storm on the North Carolina coast is 89 miles per hour.
It is not possible to stand in the middle of a tornado. The winds would be too strong to even get there. People have been know to be picked up by a tornado and thrown several miles away without being killed.
A steady 336 miles per hour. Record winds of 628miles per hour.
52 knots is about 60 miles per hour.
80 miles = 129 km (rounded)
Hurricane force winds are 74 mph or greater.
By definition it is a hurricane. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with winds of 74 mph or more.
That is highly variable and is in fact a measure of the hurricane's size. The radius of tropical storm force winds in a hurricane can be less than 100 miles, to more than 600 miles.
It varies considerably. A tropical storm must have sustained winds of at least 74 miles per hour to be considered a hurricane. Hurricanes with sustained winds has high as 200 miles per hour have been observed, along with stronger gusts.