Office Cleaning in Ludgate Hill, London

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Our company will make a complete survey of your building to ensure that we can provide you with the services that you desire. Our team will write a proposal with price and services to meet your every need.
Whether you are looking for weekly, monthly, bi-monthly or a one-time Ludgate Hill office cleaning, you will receive top of the line service from our professional Ludgate Hill office cleaning services. The cleaning quality, we offer, is truly limitless!
Our agency can develop an office cleaning service plan specifically for our Ludgate Hill clients no matter what is the size of your facility. Our Ludgate Hill office cleaning programs emphasize personalization -- daily, weekly, or monthly -- since each business has different needs.
Covered postcodes: EC4
Information about Ludgate Hill
Ludgate Hill is a hill in the City of London, near the old Ludgate, a gate to the City that was taken down, with its attached jail, in 1780. Ludgate Hill is the site of St Paul's Cathedral, traditionally said to have been the site of a Roman temple of the goddess Diana. It is one of the three ancient hills of London, the others are Tower Hill and Cornhill.
Ludgate Hill is also a related street which runs west from St. Paul's Churchyard to Ludgate Circus (built in 1864), and from there becomes Fleet Street. It was formerly a much narrower street called Ludgate Street.
The legendary King Ludd is supposed to have founded the settlement or City of London, Caer-Ludd in the 1st century BCE. It is derived from Ludd-deen or Valley of Ludd. St. Pauls is situated on top of Ludgate Hill in London, the original settlement of Ludd. Below it is the Roman gate of Ludd called Ludgate.
Many small alleys on Ludgate Hill were swept away in the early 1870s to build Ludgate Hill Station between Water Lane and New Bridge Street, a station of the London, Chatham and Dover Railway.
Not far away, in Cannon Street, is the Roman or pre-Roman London Stone, from which measurements to London have been taken.
Source: WikiPedia