Office Cleaning in Oxford Street, London

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Now you can keep your place of business or house neat and clean in spite of your hectic schedule-put the pros from our Oxford Street office cleaning to work for you! We are on the market to offer a range of Oxford Street office cleaning services for your workplace and home, from daily waste removal to dusting, vacuuming, buffing, and light maintenance. Our staff uses the best cleaning products and equipment available and gives your office the very care that you would-but we save you the time, effort, and hassle.
Our Oxford Street office cleaning personnel have great attitudes and maintain the highest level of workmanship. Our agency ensures the work of our personnel is of the highest quality by developing an action plan that is previously agreed upon by our customers, followed by on site training by management. You can be sure we are committed to providing a reliable, trustworthy and high quality service, the expertise to resolve any technical problems, value for your money and the resources to provide you with the cleaning and hygiene standards our customers require.
Covered postcodes: W1
Information about Oxford Street
Oxford Street is a major London shopping street in the City of Westminster. It runs from Marble Arch at the north east corner of Hyde Park, through Oxford Circus to its termination at St Giles' Circus, at the intersection with Charing Cross Road and Tottenham Court Road. The road then becomes New Oxford Street until it runs into High Holborn. To the west, Oxford Street becomes Bayswater Road (at Marble Arch). Oxford Street intersects with other famous London roads including Park Lane, New Bond Street and Regent Street.
The street follows the route of a Roman road which linked Hampshire with Colchester and became one of the major routes in and out of the city. Between the 12th century and 1782 it was known as Tyburn Street, after the River Tyburn that ran just to the south of it (and now flows underneath it). It became notorious as the route taken by prisoners on their final journey from Newgate Prison to the gallows at Tyburn near Marble Arch.
In the late 18th century, many of the surrounding fields were purchased by the Earl of Oxford, and the area was developed. It soon became popular with entertainers including tiger-baiters and masquerades. During the 19th century, the area became known for its shops and this has continued. Oxford Street is a square on the British Monopoly board. It is part of the green set together with Regent Street and Bond Street.
Oxford Street is the UK's most famous shopping street, home to major department stores and hundreds of smaller shops. It is the major shopping street in central London, though not the most expensive or fashionable. It is part of a larger shopping district with Regent Street, Bond Street and many smaller nearby streets. The other principal shopping area in central London is Knightsbridge, famous for Harrods department store. For many British chain stores, their Oxford Street branch is regarded as their 'flagship' store and used for celebrity launches and promotions.
Each Christmas the street is decorated with an array of festive lights. The heavily-publicized 'turning-on' ceremony is in mid-to-late November, when a major celebrity flicks the switch to illuminate the decorations. The lights remain until January 6.
The annual addition of the lights began in 1959, five years after its neighbour Regent Street had begun the tradition. In 1967, as the recession hit London, the lights were stopped and only returned in 1978 when Oxford Street organised a laser display.
Nearest tube stations along Oxford Street starting at Marble Arch:
- Marble Arch
- Bond Street
- Oxford Circus
- Tottenham Court Road
Source: WikiPedia