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house removals in Strand WC2

House Removals WC2 Easy Tips for

Moving House Strand to a New Place


Are you planning to relocate your house WC2 to a new location? If yes, you need to keep in mind that house removals WC2 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 Strand to a new place:

Plan your house move WC2

If you do not have a concrete plan for moving house Strand,  everything can go haywire.   You need to start your WC2 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 WC2 Strand:



We also provide moving and other services in nearby areas including Strand, Turnpike Lane, Tottenham and Dollis Hill .

WC2 house removals services in  Strand



Places of interest in WC2




St John's Gate, Clerkenwell

The building has many historical associations, most notably as the original printing-house for Edward Cave's pioneering monthly, the Gentleman's Magazine, and sometime workplace of Samuel Johnson. From 1701?1709 it was the home of the painter William Hogarth who was just a child at that time. In 1703 his father Richard opened a coffee house there, 'Hogarth's Coffee House', offering Latin lessons along with the coffee.

St John (restaurant)

St John is a restaurant on St John Street in Smithfield, London, England. It was opened in October 1994 by Fergus Henderson, Trevor Gulliver and Jon Spiteri, on the premises of a former bacon smoke house.

London Charterhouse

The buildings were damaged in the Blitz but were carefully restored during the 1950s so that some medieval and much 16th and 17th century fabric remains. Charterhouse School moved out in 1872, being replaced (till 1933) by the Merchant Taylors' School, but Charterhouse is still home to senior (male) citizens. The school buildings on the site of the former monastic cloister eventually became the home of the St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School, and remain (though now much redeveloped) one of the sites of its successor, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry. The main part of the cloister garth continues to be a pleasant lawn in the quadrangle of the university site.

Finchley Central tube station

Finchley Central station was built by the Edgware, Highgate and London Railway (EH&LR) and was originally opened as Finchley & Hendon on 22 August 1867 by the Great Northern Railway (GNR) (which had taken over the EH&LR) in what was then rural Middlesex.[3] The station was on a line that ran from Finsbury Park to Edgware via Highgate. A branch line from this station was constructed by the GNR to High Barnet and opened on 1 April 1872.[3] The station was renamed to Finchley (Church End) on 1 February 1894.

Information by Wikipedia.com

Email: office@clapham-removals.co.uk

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