House Cleaning in Bank, London

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The cleaners, we provide, are competent and careful. They can iron, dust and polish or full turn out and scrub, our dailies will do a spectacular job. Our staff is happy to discuss your needs and fulfill your requirements.
Our regular weekly house cleaning service, covering Bank, starts at a very affordable rates.
We provide customized house cleaning service specific to our clients needs. Our staff is motivated by your complete satisfaction.
In addition to weekly, bi-weekly and monthly house cleanings, we also offer one-time house cleanings that include move-ins and move-outs, spring-cleaning, service prior to a big event and other non-recurring services.
We provide the best and most thorough cleaning services in Bank area.
Covered postcodes: EC2, EC3
Information about Bank
Bank is interlinked London Underground stations, spanning the length of King William Street in the City of London. On the Central Line, the station is between St. Paul's and Liverpool Street. On the Northern Line the station is between London Bridge and Moorgate. Bank is the northern terminus of the Waterloo & City Line, the only other station being the southern terminus at Waterloo station. Bank is the western terminus for the Docklands Light Railway (DLR), the next station being Shadwell.
The Metropolitan Railway (MR) and Metropolitan District Railway (MDR) had, by 1876, constructed the majority of the Inner Circle (now the Circle Line), reaching Aldgate and Mansion House respectively. The companies were in dispute over the completion of the route as the MDR was struggling financially and the MR was concerned that completion would effect its revenues through increased competition from the MDR in the City area. City financiers keen to see the line completed, established the Metropolitan Inner Circle Completion Railway in 1874 to link Mansion House to Aldgate. Forced into action, the MR bought-out the company and it and the MDR began construction of the final section of the Inner Circle in 1879.
The station at Monument opened on 6 October 1884. Initially the station was served by trains from both companies as part of circular Inner Circle service but various operational patterns have been used during the station's life. The Inner Circle service achieved a separate identity as the Circle Line in 1949 although its trains were still provided by the District or Metropolitan Lines.
The Waterloo & City Railway was constructed by the London and South Western Railway (L&SWR) as a link between its terminus at Waterloo and the City. The station, with platforms under Queen Victoria Street and close to Mansion House, opened on 8 August 1898. The station was originally called City. The slopes to the platforms were later provided with one of the few sets of moving walkways on the whole underground system, unusually inclined at a slight angle. Advertising at the Waterloo & City station often takes the form of large painted murals on the walls and ceilings of the sloped exits, forming one of the largest advertisements on the underground.
The first station to be known as Bank opened on 25 February 1900 when the City & South London Railway (C&SLR, now part of the Northern Line) opened its extension from Borough to Moorgate. The earlier terminus of the line, King William Street, on a different tunnel alignment was closed at the same time. The intended location for a station building was the site of the 18th century church of St Mary Woolnoth on the corner of Lombard Street, which the C&SLR had obtained permission to demolish. Public protest made the company change its plans to building only a sub-surface ticket hall and lift entrance in the crypt of the church. This necessitated moving the bodies elsewhere, strenghtening the crypt with a steel framework and underpinning the church's foundations. Unusually for stations subsequently converted to escalators, the original lift access from the ticket hall is still in use.
The opening of the eastern terminus of the Central London Railway (CLR, now the Central Line) followed on 30 July 1900.
As with the C&SLR, the high cost of property in the City, coupled with the presence of the Royal Exchange, the Bank of England, and Mansion House, meant that the station had to be built entirely underground. Permission was granted by the Corporation of London for the station to be sited beneath the busy junction of roads meeting at this point provided public subways were proved to act as pedestrian road crossings. To avoid undermining the road above, the station's lifts were installed in separate lift shafts rather than paired two-per-shaft as usual.
To avoid compensating property owners for vibrations during construction and from operation, the alignments of the CLR's tunnels were arranged directly under London's streets. This meant that the platforms directly under Threadneedle Street and Poultry have an extreme curve to them, so that on the westbound platform it is not possible to see one end of the platform from the other. The proximity of the CLR, W&CR and C&SLR stations, and the non-competing directions that their services travelled in, meant that it was only a short time before the ticket halls were connected. At deep level, connection between the CLR and C&SLR platforms had to wait until the introduction of escalators into the station in the 1920s. On 11 January 1941 during World War II the Central Line ticket hall suffered a direct hit from a German bomb. The roadway collapsed into the subways and station concourse, killing 56 people.
On Sunday September 7, 2003 Bank station was used for a disaster training exercise, billed as "the most realistic live disaster exercise of its kind". The event, lasting several hours and involving about 500 police, fire, ambulance and London Underground personnel, was intended to prepare the emergency services for mass decontamination in the event of a chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear attack.
Source: WikiPedia