Cleaning Company in Catford, London

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We will help you keep your budget by providing just the services that you require at just the right prices. Our cleaning company is firmly committed to developing a close working relationship between clients, supervisors and cleaning staff. We know from experience that effective communication is the key to competent problem solving.
One-time, weekly, bi-weekly, monthly. Dusting all the furniture, picture frames, mirrors, etc.; all cobwebs, cleaning baseboards, wiping window sills, emptying ashtrays and wastebaskets, vacuuming all carpets, cleaning light fixtures, cleaning bathrooms, cleaning the kitchen, checking for fingerprints on the walls, that's only a part from the services our professional Catford cleaning company provide. And on request - we'll gladly clean anything else!
All the services with your satisfaction 100% guaranteed!
Covered postcodes: SE6
Information about Catford
Catford is an area in the London Borough of Lewisham, England. It is located 6.3 miles (10.1 km) south east of Charing Cross. The name may either derive from wildcats at a crossing of the River Ravensbourne or, as is more likely, from a cattle ford across the same river. Catford's most prominent landmark is the Catford Cat, a giant fibreglass sculpture of a black cat above the entrance to the Catford Centre. This is a small shopping centre, housing Tesco and Iceland supermarkets as well as some independent shops in the punningly-named Catford Mews. There is a street market on Catford Broadway. Catford has several pubs and a variety of non-chain restaurants and cafes. Catford's oldest pub is the Black Horse and Harrow which existed at least as early as 1700, though the present building dates from 1897. Between 1932 and 2003, Catford Stadium was a successful greyhound racing track, but it is now closed.
The 1960's and 70's had a considerable impact on the architecure of Catford. The old Town Hall, 'the Catford Cathedral' of 1875 was replaced by the current Civic Suite in 1968, soon after the merger of the metropolitan boroughs of Lewisham and Deptford. Laurence House where many of the borough's offices are housed is on the site of St Laurence's Church. The brutalist Eros House, which replaced the Lewisham Hippodrome (Catford's music hall designed by the famous theatre architect Frank Matcham) in 1960, is now Grade II listed. In Rushey Green outside Eros House, the old village hand-pump from the 1850s survives. In 1974 the Catford shopping centre was built by the brutalist architect Owen Luder.
The art deco Broadway theatre adjoins the town hall. This is a curved stone structure decorated with shields and heraldic emblems and topped with an attractive copper-green spire. It was opened in 1932 as the Concert Hall and is now a Grade II listed building. The interior is in art deco style. The only cinema in the borough stood opposite the theatre until its closure in 2002.
Other than the shows at the Broadway Theatre the main cultural events are Lewisham Peoples day held in Mountsfield Park and the yearly beer festival organised by CAMRA (The Campaign for Real Ale) which is held at the theatre. In recent years it has been satirised in The Chap magazine series called 'A year in Catford' after Peter Mayle's bestseller 'A Year in Provence'. The magazine poked fun at Catford's mundanity.
Catford is well connected for public transport, with two adjacent stations where railway lines cross (but do not interchange). Catford railway station is on the route between Blackfriars station and Sevenoaks via Bromley South, while Catford Bridge railway station is on the Mid-Kent line to Hayes from Charing Cross and Cannon Street stations. As well as the railway stations there is Catford bus garage, providing many routes towards Central London and out towards Bromley
Source: WikiPedia