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Kettering PipeRight Plumbing
Best Plumbers in Kettering Northamtonshire
Kettering PipeRight Plumbing
Kettering PipeRight Plumbing
9 King StKettering Northamtonshire NN16 8QPUK
44 1536 665135
Business Description
Are you looking for a plumber near Kettering? Kettering PipeRight Plumbing has a team of reliable plumbers serving the Kettering region. We provide a number of plumbing and heating services for both domestic and commercial customers in the Kettering area. Give our office a call if you need assistance with any plumbing issues you may be having. One of our expert engineers would be more than happy to visit your property. We are also experts in boiler services. If you need a new boiler or are experiencing trouble with you current boiler, we are always here to either install a new boiler set up, or service and repair your current one. We also offer bespoke kitchen and bathroom fitting services. Call Now!
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About Kettering
Kettering is a market and industrial town in the North Northamptonshire unitary authority area of Northamptonshire, England. It forms a civil parish called Kettering Town. Kettering is located 67 miles (108 km) north of London and 15 miles (24 km) north-east of Northampton, west of the River Ise, a tributary of the River Nene. The name means "the place (or territory) of Ketter's people (or kinsfolk)".In the 2021 census Kettering's built-up area had a population of 63,150. It is part of the East Midlands, along with the rest of Northamptonshire. There is a growing commuter population as it is on the Midland Main Line railway, with East Midlands Railway services direct to London St Pancras International taking about an hour. == Early history == Kettering means "the place (or territory) of Ketter's people (or kinsfolk)". Spelt variously Cytringan, Kyteringas and Keteiringan in the 10th century, although the origin of the name appears to have baffled place-name scholars in the 1930s, words and place-names ending with "-ing" usually derive from the Anglo-Saxon or Old English suffix -inga or -ingas, meaning "the people of the" or "tribe". Before the Romans, the area, like much of Northamptonshire's prehistoric countryside, appears to have remained somewhat intractable with regards to early human occupation, resulting in an apparently sparse population and relatively few finds from the Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic periods. About 500 BC the Iron Age was introduced into the area by a continental people in the form of the Hallstatt culture, and over the next century a series of hillforts were constructed, the closest to Kettering being at nearby Irthlingborough.