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house removals in Whitehall Park N19

House Removals N19 Easy Tips for

Moving House Whitehall Park to a New Place


Are you planning to relocate your house N19 to a new location? If yes, you need to keep in mind that house removals N19 is a difficult process as you need to take care of your belongings, breakable items and furniture. Here are some easy tips for house removals Whitehall Park to a new place:

Plan your house move N19

If you do not have a concrete plan for moving house Whitehall Park,  everything can go haywire.   You need to start your N19 house removals process only after you have a proper plan. Whilst planning, give more importance to matters that are time-sensitive.


List of services we provide in N19 Whitehall Park:



We also provide moving and other services in nearby areas including Whitehall Park, Primrose Hill, Hampstead Gdn Suburb and Beckton .

N19 house removals services in  Whitehall Park



Places of interest in N19




Manor House tube station

The station, named after a nearby public house, is situated at the junction of Seven Sisters Road and Green Lanes and was designed by Charles Holden. Opened 19 September 1932, it lies between Finsbury Park and Turnpike Lane tube stations. Like all stations on the Cockfosters extension, Manor House station set new aesthetic standards, not previously seen on London's Underground. The station was equipped with nine street level entrances, two of which gave access to tram routes to and from Tottenham, Edmonton and Stamford Hill via tramway island exits into Seven Sisters Road. The last of these tram services were withdrawn in 1938 and replaced by trolleybuses and the exits were removed in 1951. The sub-surface areas of the station were tiled in biscuit coloured tiles lined with blue friezes. These were refurbished in 2005. The station tunnels have, in common with those of Turnpike Lane and Wood Green, a diameter of 23 feet (7 metres) and were designed for the greater volume of traffic expected. In contrast, Bounds Green and Southgate have only 21 foot (6.4 metres) diameter platform tunnels. The construction of "suicide pits" between the rails was also innovative. These were built in connection with a system of passageways under the platforms to give access to the track.

Harringay Arena

In April, famed black singer Paul Robeson appeared at Harringay as part of his European concert tour. Sell-out audiences, including one of 10,000 at the Arena, led him to describe the tour as " the most successful concert tour of my career"[14][15]

Harringay Stadium

The first world final for stock cars took place at Harringay on 24 June 1955. The cars returned to Harringay for the World Championship finals in 1963, 1967, 1970 and 1973. By the 1960s and '70s British stock cars had evolved away from second-hand wrecks into purpose-built single-seater "specials" of enormous power and well-constructed, costing thousands of pounds to build.

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

Email: office@clapham-removals.co.uk

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