Cleaning Company in Clapham, London

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We specialize in new home and business construction cleaning including frame sweeps, paint sweeps, window cleaning, final cleans, re-cleans, and power washing. We also offer office cleaning, showroom cleaning, and initial clean-up services.
Our Clapham cleaning company is customer focused and customer driven. Our business philosophy of local cleaning company, with related capabilities, is the key to our success in Clapham. Let us put our cleaning capabilities to work for you. The leadership team, working at the Clapham cleaning company is responsible and accountable for the company's integrity. And finally, we have a vision that is constant and unwavering: To be our customers' best supplier.
Let our team visit your facility, learn about your needs and give you our professional opinion.
Covered postcodes: SW4
Information about Clapham
Clapham is a neighbourhood primarily in the London Borough of Lambeth, South London. Clapham dates back to Anglo-Saxon times; the name is said to derive from the Anglo-Saxon word for "Clappa's farm". In the late seventeenth century, large country houses began to be built here, and through the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries it was favoured by the upper classes, with many large and gracious houses and villas built around Clapham Common and in the Old Town. Samuel Pepys spent the last two years of his life in Clapham living with his friend and former servant William Hewer and he died there in 1703. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, the Clapham Sect were a group of upper class evangelic Anglicans who lived around the Common. They included William Wilberforce, who founded Holy Trinity Church, which is in the middle of the common, Henry Thornton and Zachary Macaulay, father of the historian Thomas Macaulay. They were very prominent in campaigns for the abolition of slavery, against child labour and for prison reform. They also promoted missionary activity in Britain's colonies.
After the coming of the railways, Clapham developed as a suburb for daily commuters into central London, and by 1900, it had fallen from favour with the upper classes. Most of their grand houses had been demolished by the middle of the twentieth century, though a few remain around the Common and in the Old Town, as do a substantial number of fine late eighteenth and early nineteenth century houses. In the twentieth century, Clapham was seen as an unremarkable suburb, often cited as representing the ordinary people: the so-called "man on the Clapham omnibus".
Today Clapham covers a largish area surrounding Clapham Common. The Old Town and High Street to the east of the Common have a lively set of restaurants and shops. At the end of the twentieth century and beginning of the twenty-first, local property prices rose steeply, and Clapham is now home to a rather homogeneous grouping of affluent young white collar workers in their twenties and thirties; the "man on the Clapham omnibus" is nowadays more likely to be a trainee accountant, lawyer or investment banker. Most of the High Street's bars and restaurants cater for them and are packed to the rafters at weekends. However to some degree the area retains a vestige of its formerly mixed character, with different social and ethnic groups living alongside each other.
Natsume Soseki's lodgings in Clapham, South LondonThe other side of the Common, encompassing Battersea Rise, Northcote Road and the area known as "Between the Commons", is popular with young middle-class professional families: (Although this area is often referred to as Clapham, it is in SW11 area and is, in fact, in Battersea.) The main railway station, Clapham Junction (which is actually in Battersea), is the largest junction on the UK network being the point where routes to the west and southwest of London converge. Other stations include:
- Clapham High Street railway station
- Wandsworth Road railway station
Nearest places
- Battersea
- Brixton
- Stockwell
- Balham
- Vauxhall
- Wandsworth
Source: WikiPedia