Office Cleaning in Bethnal Green, London

We prowide...
- professional office cleaning in Bethnal Green
- office cleaning services in Bethnal Green
- industrial office cleaning in Bethnal Green
- regular office cleaning in Bethnal Green
We are here to offer both contract and on-demand cleaning services for the office.
Your office and workspace are reflections of your own business, and if you are looking for an efficient daily or weekly Bethnal Green office cleaning service, then we have just the right package for you. We use cleaners that are environmentally friendly and you'll have the same professional Bethnal Green office cleaner each and every time. Our company tries to keep our cleaning quality while maintaining security of your office and work.
Our individually tailored solutions are developed by listening to and learning from our customers to provide improved efficiency and reduced costs.
We provide a professional staff and supervisors, who can maintain building lobbies, entrances, employee rest areas, conference rooms, training rooms, and office areas. The entire staff is trained, equipped, and focused to clean each building to the customer's standards.
Covered postcodes: E2
Information about Bethnal Green
Bethnal Green is a place in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, in the heart of London's East End. Bethnal Green is located 3.3 miles (5.3 km) north east of Charing Cross.
In the nineteenth century, Bethnal Green was characterised by its market gardens and by the silk-weaving trade. Having been an area of large houses and gardens as late as the eighteenth century, by about 1860, Bethnal Green was characterised by tumbledown old buildings, with many families living in each house. By the end of the nineteenth century, Bethnal Green was one of the poorest slums in London. Jack the Ripper operated at the western end of Bethnal Green and in neighbouring Whitechapel.
In 1943, the unopened Bethnal Green tube station was the site of a wartime disaster. Families had crowded into the underground station to escape German bombing, but the sounds of explosions started a panic. 173 people died in the resulting crush. The news was not released at the time for fear of damaging wartime morale, but there is now a plaque at the entrance to the tube station.
During the 1960s, famous gangsters the Kray twins lived in Bethnal Green, but by the beginning of the twenty-first century, Bethnal Green, in common with much of the old East End, began to undergo a process of gentrification.
The former Bethnal Green Infirmary, later the London County Council Bethnal Green Hospital, stood opposite Cambridge Heath railway station. The hospital closed as a public hospital in the 1960s and was a geriatric hospital under the NHS until the 1980s. Much of the site was developed for housing in the 1990s but the hospital entrance and administration block remains as a listed building. Marcus Garvey was at one time buried here, before his body was returned to Jamaica.
Source: WikiPedia