House Cleaning in Strand, London

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We specialize in custom residential house cleaning services, along with small office maintenance in Strand.
Our specialists can take care of the small one bedroom bachelor apartment, or the large custom designed home. We clean on a weekly, bi-monthly, monthly or occasional basis, and vacancies are always welcome.
We know that you value your home, while we value your business. We offer reliable and personal house cleaning service in Strand at affordable rates.
Providing a wide variety of special services on a one-time basis, designed to address your particular home or office cleaning needs.
Our Strand house cleaning services are designed around you: your home or office, your priorities, your budget.
Covered postcodes: WC2
Information about Strand
Strand is a street in London, England. It was the original road between the City of London and the royal centre of Westminster, which were separate settlements in the Middle Ages - although until the 16th or 17th century the River Thames rivalled it as the main route between the two. Nowadays it starts at Trafalgar Square and runs east to the boundary of the City of London, where it flows into Fleet Street. Temple Bar marks the boundary of the City at this point.
The street is popularly referred to as The Strand although the street address is actually just "Strand", hence, strictly speaking, "366 Strand" and not "366, The Strand". On the Monopoly board is it written as "Strand", while on the title deed card it is "The Strand".
The name Strand comes from the Old English word for 'shore' or 'river bank' and is the German and Dutch word for beach. Before the construction of The Embankment, Strand ran directly next to The Thames. Strand and Aldwych have been inhabited since Saxon times, when the area was a major place of settlement, just outside of the old Roman city walls. Throughout the Middle Ages this area remained a link of development and activity between the commercial centre to the east and the political to the west.
Two of the churches in the Strand now stand on island sites amidst the traffic. St Clement Danes is believed to date back to the 9th century, but the present building is mainly a 17th century work by Sir Christopher Wren. St Mary-le-Strand was designed by James Gibbs and completed in 1717. There are two tube stations: Charing Cross and Aldwych which is disused. Strand tube station was merged into the new Charing Cross tube station when the Jubilee Line was built (along with the Trafalgar Square tube station on the Bakerloo Line).
Source: WikiPedia