London is a busy and thriving city. We all know what is like to live on full speed, to hurry to get back from work to pick up the kids, to cook, to clean your house….There are so many other things on your mind that you often forget that you also have a garden to maintain. The garden is a very important part of your house, because usually it is the first thing everyone sees when comes to visit you.
It is also a time consuming chore. So why go through all of this trouble and spending your days off mowing the lawn, when you can use them for leisure and fun. London Cleaning House can relieve you from this burden. We have employed only experienced and dedicated gardeners and we guarantee that they will take outmost care of your garden. Here are the basic services we offer:
- Planting, garden restoration
- Lawn edging, lawn mowing
- Weeding, hedge trimming
- Trees pruning, paths cleaning
- Garbage removal, overall garden maintenance
Our gardeners are available seven days in a week. They are fully vetted and insured and you do not have to worry about a thing. Our services come at reasonable prices and guarantee satisfying results. Give us a call and our polite assistants will help you out with choosing the most convenient date and time. All the contacts you need are listed on the site.
The areas that our gardeners cover in West Central London are: Strand, Holborn, Bloomsbury, Grays Inn and Covent Garden. The Gray’s Inn, or The Honorable Society of Gray’s Inn, as one may call it, is a place of lawyers and barristers. It was the biggest of the four Inns of Court in London, but it got damaged very badly during World War II and nowadays it is the smallest.
Bloomsbury is a thriving housing area in central London. It is famous for its garden squares. It is also home of many important institutions – the British Museum, the British Medical Association and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. The London Underground serves the area with stations at Euston, Holborn and Warren Street. Euston and King’s Cross are also railway stations.
