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office removals in  Dollis Hill NW2

Hire Office Removals NW2


Apply Clever Office Moving Dollis Hill Strategies


Moving Dollis Hill often takes a lot of time in preparation for the Dollis Hill moving out and moving in. Hence, you need to work this out with your employees to make this activity a lot easier.

Consider getting London removals Dollis Hill. The services offered by London removals NW2 offer a lot of benefits to business offices that are making a move.

Pursuing an NW2 office move is difficult. However, if you are going to apply careful strategies like the ones that were mentioned above, it isn’t impossible for you to make your NW2 office move manageable and organized. This is especially true if you are going to get the offered services of London removals Dollis Hill.       

List of services we provide in NW2 Dollis Hill:



We also provide moving and other services in nearby areas including Dollis Hill, Willesden, Clapton and Wanstead .

NW2 office removals services in  Dollis Hill



Places of interest in NW2




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 After the war, it was reused for television until 1956, when it was superseded by the opening of the BBC's new main transmitting station for the London area at Crystal Palace.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.

Hornsey

The boundaries of Hornsey neighbourhood today are not clearly defined. Since the Municipal Borough of Hornsey was abolished in 1965, the name may refer either to the N8 postal district which includes Crouch End and part of Harringay, or to an area centred around Hornsey High Street, at the eastern end of which is the churchyard and tower of the former parish church which used to be the administrative centre of Hornsey (parish).

Crouch End railway station

The station was built by the Edgware, Highgate and London Railway and opened on 22 August 1867. The line ran from Finsbury Park to Edgware via Highgate with branches to Alexandra Palace and High Barnet. After the 1921 Railways Act created the Big Four railway companies, the line was, from 1923, part of the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER).

City Road tube station

The station building remained until the 1960s, when all but the structure immediately around the original lift shaft was demolished.[1] Today little remains to indicate the site of the former station. At track level the short station tunnels remain visible from trains passing through.

Information by Wikipedia.com

Email: office@clapham-removals.co.uk

Clapham Removals ©2008 - May 22, 2012, 07:24 pm