The looming storm forced the postponement of the first Washington meeting between President Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel from tomorrow until Friday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer announced.
The National Weather Service issued a 24-hour blizzard warning from midnight today for New York, America's financial capital and largest city, stretching north into Connecticut and south into New Jersey.
Additional winter storm warnings were posted from southern Maine to Virginia, south of Washington, where the National Park Service warned that the extreme cold could wipe out up to 90 per cent of the city's famed cherry blossoms.
Weather advisories spread far inland. In Chicago, where about two inches (five centimeters) of snow fell today, airlines canceled 583 flights at Midway and O'Hare airports, setting up more potential travel havoc.
"This should be a very serious blizzard," New York Mayor Bill de Blasio told a news conference, announcing that schools would be closed tomorrow, with 16 to 20 inches (41 to 51 centimeters) of snow expected to fall during the day.
New York last year experienced the biggest snowstorm in the city's history with a record 27.3 inches falling in Central Park in 24 hours. Winter Storm Jonas paralyzed parts of the Northeast and left 18 people dead.
This week's Winter Storm Stella has formed near the coast, the collision of two low pressure systems expected to dump snow on a wide area home to tens of millions of Americans from the central Appalachian Mountains to New England.
The heaviest snow is expected to wallop New York and other coastal areas north of Philadelphia up to New England, National Weather Service meteorologist Melissa Di Spigna told AFP.
"We're expecting it to be the worst snow of the season," she said, after previous winter temperatures "well above normal."
New York is likely to see winds as strong as 64 to 80 kilometers per hour and the city should brace for whiteout conditions tomorrow, with some coastal flooding expected, De Blasio said.
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