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House cleaning in Clayhall IG5

 House cleaning in Clayhall. Do you need home cleaning help?

London Carpet Cleaning is a professional cleaning company with over 14 years valuable experience in the carpet and upholstery cleaning in E18 house cleaning. If you are looking for information on carpet cleaning you came to the right place. For best results hire a professional carpet to help you with your cleaning in Clayhall.

Our main area for carpet cleaning and sofa cleaning includes South West London, West London, East London, North West London and north London and Clayhall.


Already a well established cleaning company, we provide a wide range of carpet cleaning and full house cleaning services to our customers across West London and E12 house cleaning
.
We are a young and ambitious company looking to change the level of expectations in the cleaning business and impress all our customers in House cleaning in Clayhall.
We understand how pleasant cleaning your house can be, and your trust in us and our professional cleaning service is our priority in E12 house cleaning.

Clayhall House cleaning services in IG5

List of services we provide in IG5 Clayhall:




Places of interest in


Valentines Park

Valentines Park is, at 125 acres (51 ha), the largest green space in the London Borough of Redbridge, between Ilford and Gants Hill. It was acquired in various purchases and gifts of land, starting in 1898 and culminating in the 1920s. The Valentines Estate had been in private hands since long before the 1690s, when the present Valentines Mansion was built. The park is home to a secondary school called Valentines High School.

Barkingside tube station

The station originally opened on 1 May 1903, as part of a Great Eastern Railway (GER) branch line from Woodford to Ilford via Hainault. This "Fairlop Loop", designed to stimulate suburban growth had a chequered history and Barkingside station was temporarily closed to passenger traffic, due to World War 1 economies, from 22 May 1916 until 30 June 1919. As a consequence of the 1921 Railways Act, the GER was merged with other railway companies in 1923 to become part of the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER).

Gants Hill tube station

Construction originally began in the 1930s but was suspended during the Second World War. During the war, the station was used as an air raid shelter and the tunnels as a munitions factory for Plessey electronics. The station was finally completed and opened on 14 December 1947. Originally, it was to have been named "North Ilford".

Queen's Wood

The wood is an ancient oak-hornbeam woodland, which features English oak and occasional beech which provide a canopy above cherry, field maple, hazel, holly, hornbeam, midland hawthorn, mountain ash and both species of lowland birch. The scarce Wild Service Tree (which is evidence of the Woods's ancient origin) is scattered throughout the wood. The Wood has no park or playing fields (but does sport a children's adventure playground built on top of the plague pit) and has never been subjected to intensive management of the type practised at Highgate Wood and accordingly there is greater diversity of flora and fauna - Bantock (1984) found a significantly greater number of ground feeding birds present in the Wood when compared to Highgate Wood, which he attributed to the greater structural diversity and denser shrub layer present. Queen's Wood and Highgate Wood are a Local Nature Reserve, designated as a Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation.[1]

Alexandra Palace television station

The Alexandra Palace transmitting station in North London (grid reference TQ297901) is one of the oldest television transmission sites in the world. What was at the time called "high definition" (405-line) TV broadcasts on VHF were beamed from this mast from 1936 until the outbreak of World War II. It then lay dormant until it was used very successfully to foil the German Y-Gerät radio navigation system during the last stages of the Battle of Britain. After the war, it was reused for television until 1956, when it was superseded by the opening of the BBC's new main transmitting station for the London area at Crystal Palace. In 1982 Alexandra Palace became an active transmitting station again, with the opening of a relay transmitter to provide UHF television service to parts of North London poorly covered from Crystal Palace.

Information by Wikipedia.com



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