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House cleaning in Upper Holloway N19

 House cleaning in Upper Holloway. 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 N19 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 Upper Holloway.

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


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 N8 house cleaning
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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 Upper Holloway.
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Upper Holloway House cleaning services in N19

List of services we provide in N19 Upper Holloway:




Places of interest in


Crouch End railway station

Addiscombe · Alexandra Palace · Bandon Halt · Battersea · Battersea Park Road · Beckton · Beddington Lane · Belmont · Bingham Road · Bishopsgate · Bishopsgate (Low Level) · Blackfriars Bridge · Blackfriars Road · Blackheath Hill · Blackwall · Borough Road · Bow · Bow Road · Brentford (GWR) · Bricklayers' Arms · Broad Street · Brockley Lane · Burdett Road · Camberwell · Camden Road (Midland) · Cannon Street Road · Central · Chelsea and Fulham · Coborn Road · Commercial Dock · Connaught Road · Coulsdon North · Cowley · Cranley Gardens · Crouch End · Croydon Central · Crystal Palace (High Level) · Devonshire Street · Dudding Hill · East Brixton · Edgware · Eltham Park · Eltham Well Hall · Finchley Road · Gallions · Globe Road · Greenwich Park · Grosvenor Road · Hammersmith and Chiswick · Hammersmith (Grove Road) · South Harefield Halt · Harlesden (Midland) · Haverstock Hill · Heathrow Junction · Highgate Road · Holborn Viaduct · Holloway and Caledonian Road · Honor Oak · Hornsey Road · Hounslow Town · Junction Road · Kensal Green and Harlesden · Kew · King's Cross Thameslink · Lea Bridge · Leman Street · Lewisham Road · Limehouse · Lordship Lane · Lower Edmonton · Ludgate Hill · Maiden Lane · Manor Way · Merton Abbey · Merton Park · Mildmay Park · Mile End · Mill Hill (The Hale) · Millwall Docks · Millwall Junction · Minories · Morden Road · Necropolis · Nine Elms · Noel Park and Wood Green · North Greenwich · North Woolwich · Old Ford · Old Kent Road · Palace Gates · Poplar · Poplar (East India Dock Road) · Selsdon · Shadwell · Shepherd's Bush · Shoreditch · Silvertown · South Bromley · South Dock · South Harefield Halt · Southwark Park · Spa Road · Spencer Road · St Ann's Road · Stanmore Village · Stratford Market · Stroud Green · Tidal Basin · Tooting Junction · Trumpers Crossing · Upper Sydenham · Uxbridge High Street · Uxbridge Road · Uxbridge Vine Street · Victoria Park · Victoria Park & Bow · Waddon Marsh · Walworth Road · Welsh Harp · Wembley Stadium (1923?1968) · West Green · West India Docks · Willesden · Woodside · Wormwood Scrubs

Upper Holloway

Upper Holloway is a district in the London Borough of Islington, London. The name has fallen out of common use and the area is generally regarded as being a part of Archway. The use of 'Upper Holloway' is most often used for Upper Holloway railway station. Upper Holloway is the original designation of the N19 postal district. The classic late Victorian comic novel Diary of a Nobody is set in Upper Holloway.

Archway tube station

Roundel on southbound platform

Fenchurch Street railway station

The station was the first to be constructed inside the City; the original station was designed by William Tite and was opened on 20 July 1841[6] for the London and Blackwall Railway (L&BR), replacing a nearby terminus at Minories that had opened in July 1840. The station was rebuilt in 1854, following a design by George Berkeley, adding a vaulted roof and the main facade. The station became the London terminus of the London, Tilbury and Southend Railway (LT&SR) in 1858; additionally, from 1850 until the opening of Broad Street station in 1865 it was also the City terminus of the North London Railway. The Great Eastern Railway (GER) also used the station as an alternative to an increasingly overcrowded Liverpool Street station for the last part of the 19th and first half of the 20th century over the routes of the former Eastern Counties Railway.[7] The L&BR effectively closed in 1926 after the cessation of passenger services east of Stepney. When the former Eastern Counties lines transferred to the Central line in 1948 the LT&SR became the sole user of the station.

St Mary Axe

'Number 70 St Mary Axe' appears in several novels by the British author Tom Holt as the address of a firm of sorcerers headed by J. W. Wells (The Portable Door (2003), In your dreams (2004), Earth, Air, Fire and Custard (2005), You Don't Have To Be Evil To Work Here, But It Helps (2006) ). This is itself a reference to Gilbert and Sullivan's The Sorcerer. In the song "My Name Is John Wellington Wells", the lyric renders his address as "Number Seventy Simmery Axe": this reflects the fact that some Londoners have pronounced the street's name as "S'M'ry Axe" rather than enunciating it clearly.

Information by Wikipedia.com



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