Office Cleaning in Shoreditch, London

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- industrial office cleaning solutions in Shoreditch
- office cleaning services in Shoreditch
- flexible contract office cleaning services in Shoreditch
- contract office cleaning in Shoreditch
Our cleaning company is flexible in the work and is able to meet all the client's requirements. You can provide all the cleaning materials and equipment or leave it to us, it's your choice. We offer extremely competitive rates for the Shoreditch office cleaning, we do. The staff we provide is experienced in cleaning offices in Shoreditch, hotels, restaurants and pubs, schools and colleges, hospitals, surgeries, nursing homes, factories, banks and leisure centers. The personnel also specialize in contract work for estate agents. We can manage a variety of sites from those requiring one cleaner up to those requiring 10 or many more cleaners, depending on the situation we have.
Make sure your office and home looks clean and professional! Your office is more than just a place to work. If the office is messy and disorganized, so are your employees and their work.
Having a clean office is a sign of professionalism and organization.
Covered postcodes: E1, EC2, N1
Information about Shoreditch
Shoreditch is a place in the London Borough of Hackney. It is a built-up district located 2.3 miles (3.7 km) north east of Charing Cross and is situated at the point where five postal districts converge.
From 1899 until 1965 it was the core district of the Metropolitan Borough of Shoreditch, the town hall of which can still be seen on Old Street. The Metropolitan Borough of Shoreditch was made up of three main districts in all: Shoreditch, Hoxton and Haggerston. The whole Metropolitan Borough was incorporated into the much larger London Borough of Hackney in 1965.
Shoreditch has become something of a moveable feast in the modern world. It is generally conflated with nearby Hoxton, leading to constructions such as 'Shoho' or 'Hoxditch'. Postwar naming decisions have not helped - for example Shoreditch Park was established, postwar, in Hoxton west of the market, while Haggerston Park occupies the site of the old Shoreditch gasworks.
An old form of the name is "Soersditch", and the origin is lost, though early tradition connects it with Jane Shore, the mistress of Edward IV.
It was the site of an Augustinian priory in the 12th Century until its dissolution in 1539. In 1576, the first playhouse in England, known as The Theatre, was opened, and in 1577 the Curtain Theatre was opened in the middle of what is Curtain Road today.
During the 17th century, wealthy traders and Huguenot silk weavers moved to the area, establishing a textile industry centered to the South around Spitalfields Market. The area declined along with the textile industry and from the end of the 19th Century to the 1960s, Shoreditch was a byword for crime, prostitution and poverty.
Today Shoreditch is a busy and popular district, noted for its large number of art galleries, bars, restaurants, media businesses and an urban golf club (although the prostitution and, to a lesser degree, the textile industry still remain).
In 2005 funding was announced for the East London Line Extension which would extend the existing line from Whitechapel tube station bypassing Shoreditch tube station and creating a new station titled Shoreditch High Street at the site of the old Bishopsgate Goods Yards which were demolished in 2004. The current London Underground station is due to close permanently in June 2006 as a result of the extension.
Source: WikiPedia