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House cleaning in Surrey Quays  SE16

House Cleaning in SE16Surrey Quays

Top Tips to Make House Cleaning Easier Surrey QuaysSE16


First, you need to create a regular house cleaning Surrey Quaysschedule.  You should set a thorough general house cleaning SE16 once a week.  You must also create a clean-up list for your daily cleaning SE16.  If you stick to a regular cleaning Surrey Quays  schedule, you will never face clean-up problems again. 

When cleaning the house SE16, make sure that all the necessary materials are prepared. 
You must also start house cleaning  Surrey Quays from top to bottom.  This means you have to start cleaning SE16  the ceiling before you sweep, vacuum and polish the floor. 

Never allow dirt, dust, and clutter to pile up.  You will have a hard time cleaning SE16 Surrey Quays all of them in one day. 

List of services we provide in SE16 Surrey Quays:



We also provide house cleaning and other services in nearby areas including Surrey Quays, Sydenham, South Lambeth Vauxhall and Furzedown .

Surrey Quays  house cleaning services in SE16

Places of interest in SE16


Rotherhithe tube station

It has two platforms (northbound and southbound) and is accessed by two escalators (one up, one down) and a flight of stairs to a landing, then stairs only to platform level. There is no lift. It is situated close to the southern end of the Thames Tunnel, built by the Brunels, and some of the original brickwork can be seen from the north end of the platforms.

Canada Water tube station

The station is a wholly new building on a derelict site formerly occupied by Albion Dock, part of the old Surrey Commercial Docks.[4] The station was one of the first designed for the Jubilee Line Extension. The contract for the station's construction was initially awarded to Wimpey in 1993 for the sum of £21.3 million and was later taken over by Tarmac (now Carillion).[5] Construction began in 1995. It proved extremely challenging, requiring the excavation (by cut-and-cover) of a void 150 m (490 ft) long, 23 m (75 ft) wide and 22 m (72 ft) deep. The building of the East London Line station required a separate slot at right angles, 130 m (430 ft) long, 13 m (43 ft) deep and tapering in width, incorporating a Victorian railway tunnel. Construction was complicated by the high water table on the site, which is located on the Thames flood plain; extensive deep-well dewatering was required to lower the water table before the enclosure to the excavations could be built. A total of 120,000 m³ (4,237,760 ft³) of spoil had to be excavated. An additional complication was the location of the excavation site, near the foundations of two existing 22-storey tower blocks and the northern end of the former Canada Dock, now the ornamental lake Canada Water. The section of East London line running through the station was completely reconstructed, with the 19th-century brick railway tunnel being dismantled and the track relaid over a new structure bridging the Jubilee line tracks below. As the East London line had to be closed for this work, London Underground took the opportunity to carry out other remedial works such as repairs to the Thames Tunnel, a short distance to the north.[6]

Canada Water

The lake is named after the former Canada Dock, of which Canada Water is the surviving northern third, and which was mainly used by ships from Canada. As with much of the Docklands, the Surrey Commercial Docks closed in the 1970s. During the 1980s, the London Docklands Development Corporation took over, and invested heavily in the redevelopment of the area. About half of Canada Dock was infilled and the Surrey Quays Shopping Centre built on top of it; the remainder was converted into the present lake and wildlife refuge. An ornamental canal, Albion Channel, was created (through the site of the now filled-in Albion Dock) linking Canada Water to Surrey Water, with the spoil used to create Stave Hill in nearby Russia Dock Woodland.

St John's Gate, Clerkenwell

Copper engraved view from Boswell's Antiquities published in London by Alexander Hogg, 1786

London Charterhouse

The London Charterhouse is a historic complex of buildings in Smithfield, London dating back to the 14th century. It occupies land to the north of Charterhouse Square. The Charterhouse began as (and takes its name from) a Carthusian priory, founded in 1371 and dissolved in 1537. Substantial fragments remain from this monastic period, but the site was largely rebuilt after 1545 as a large courtyard house. Thus, today it "conveys a vivid impression of the type of large rambling 16th century mansion that once existed all round London" (The Buildings of England).[1] The Charterhouse was further altered and extended after 1611, when it became an almshouse and school, endowed by Thomas Sutton. The almshouse (a home for gentleman pensioners) still occupies the site today under the name Sutton's Hospital in Charterhouse.

Information by Wikipedia.com



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