THIS Morning host Cat Deeley has moved out of the home she shared with estranged husband Patrick Kielty, The Sun on Sunday can reveal.
A removals team was seen stacking boxes into a van parked outside the North London rental property — the truck also carrying lamps, chairs and a large toy giraffe.

Cat Deeley has moved out of the home she shared with estranged husband Patrick Kielty[/caption]
The couple announced in July that they had decided to break up[/caption]
Patrick, 54, is believed to be staying on in the house which is a stone’s throw from the £5million five-bed “forever home” he and Cat, 48, bought two years ago and have been renovating since.
The couple, who have two sons, aged eight and six, announced in July that they had decided to break up.
His working pattern sees him fly to Dublin on a Tuesday to begin work on Friday night’s high-profile The Late Late Show.
He returns on a Saturday after hosting his BBC radio show in Belfast.
Cat is said to be concerned about how he is dealing with the split.
A source said: “She’s focusing on her work and the future. She’s worried Patrick seems to be taking longer to adjust. He misses the family unit, and the pressure of work on top of the public split has made it hard for him.
“He’s naturally more of a brooder while Cat is more get-up-and-go.”
The source added: “Cat still cares a lot for him and wants him to be in a good place for the boys and for himself so that does cause her some concern.
“The main thing now is for her not to allow herself to be dragged down and to keep doing what she can.”
In a joint statement announcing their break-up, the couple said: “We have taken the decision to end our marriage and are now separated. There is no other party involved.
“We will continue to be united as loving parents to our children and would therefore kindly ask for our family privacy to be respected.”
It was previously reported that Patrick’s family in Dundrum, Co Down, felt Cat should have attended his mum Mary’s funeral in March.
She instead stayed in London with the couple’s kids.
A family source said: “There was a lot of surprise. In Northern Ireland, people always turn out at family funerals. Respect’s a big thing here.”