House Cleaning in Leicester Square, London

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Do you need house cleaning in Leicester Square? We can help!
Our company provides quality, affordable house cleaning in Leicester Square and all surrounding areas.
We are based in Leicester Square house cleaning company. We also do new home and business construction cleaning and final cleans and re-cleans.
Our deep Leicester Square house cleaning service includes all the typical basic cleaning including floor care such as vacuuming, mopping floors, sweeping, dusting, wiping floor boards, cleaning window sills.
Our routine Leicester Square house cleaning service would be what we would normally do on a weekly or every other week service. This service, we offer, typically includes cleaning of all bathrooms including tub, tiles, sinks, floors, etc. as well as cleaning of the kitchen, including counters, all surfaces, floors, inside and outside of microwave, outside of all other appliances, etc. Our staff will also vacuum the entire home, do basic dusting, mop all hard floors, etc.
Covered postcodes: WC2
Information about Leicester Square
Leicester Square (pronounced "Lester Square") is a pedestrianised square in the West End of London, United Kingdom. The Square lies within an area bound by Lisle Street, to the north; Charing Cross Road, to the east; Orange Street, to the south; and Whitcomb Street, to the west. The park at the centre of the Square is bound by Cranbourn Street, to the north; Leicester Street, to the east; Irving Street, to the south; and a section of road designated simply as Leicester Square, to the west. It is within the City of Westminster, and about equal distances (about 0.2 miles or 300 meters) north of Trafalgar Square, east of Piccadilly Circus, west of Covent Garden, and south of Cambridge Circus.
In the middle of the Square is a small park, in the centre of which is a statue of William Shakespeare surrounded by dolphins. The four corner gates of the park have one statue each, depicting Sir Isaac Newton, the scientist; Sir Joshua Reynolds, the first President of the Royal Academy; John Hunter, a pioneer of surgery; and William Hogarth, the painter. The most recent addition is a statue of film star and director Charlie Chaplin. On the pavement are inscribed the distances in miles to countries of the former British Empire.
Leicester Square is the centre of London's cinema land, and one of the signs marking the Square bears the legend "Theatreland". U.K. film premieres are typically hosted at one of the square's four cinemas. It is claimed that the Square contains a cinema with the largest screen and a cinema with the most seats (over 2000). The Square is also the home for 'tkts', formerly known as the Official London Half-Price Theatre Ticket Booth. This booth is jointly owned and operated by various theatre groups. Tickets for theatre performances taking place around the West End that day are sold from the booth for about half the usual price. The popularity of the booth has given rise to many other booths and stores around the Square that advertise half-price tickets for West End shows. It is claimed that at least some of these booths operate fraudulently. Despite having names like 'Official Half-Price Ticket Booth', they are not official and they do not offer half-price tickets. The Square is home to several nightclubs, making it often very busy, particularly on Friday and Saturday evenings.
Capital Radio (now GCap Media) moved its headquarters and the studios of 95.8 Capital FM to the east side of Leicester Square, close to the Odeon Leicester Square, in 1997. Radio stations XFM (indie music), Choice FM (urban music), and Capital Gold (Oldies), all owned by GCap Media, also broadcast from the building; they will be joined by Classic FM (classical music). Beneath the Square is the main electricity substation for the West End. The cables carrying the high-voltage electricity to the substation are in a large tunnel that ends at Leicester Square and originates in Wimbledon, at Plough Lane, behind the former Wimbledon FC football ground, before which the cables are above ground, carried by pylons.
Source: WikiPedia