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Seymour Window Cleaning
Window Cleaning in , SM7 2EG, United Kingdom
Seymour Window Cleaning
Seymour Window Cleaning
33 N AcreBanstead Surrey SM7 2EGUnited Kingdom
+447767305228
Business Description
A very warm welcome to Seymour Window Cleaning, a family run business since 1992.
Reliable, professional window cleaning services in Epsom, Ashtead, Banstead, Cobham, Oxshott and St George's Hill.
We pride ourselves on providing a quality service, reliability and great customer care. All our staff are uniformed, insured and trained to a high standard.
The water fed window cleaning system is the most advanced and has many benefits over traditional window cleaning systems. Water fed poles enable us to clean windows up to 60 feet high as easily as at ground levels. The system maintains your privacy and because no ladders are used, there is no risk of damage to guttering & roof tiles.
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About Banstead
Banstead is a town in the borough of Reigate and Banstead in Surrey, England. It is 3 miles (5 km) south of Sutton, 5 miles (8 km) south-west of Croydon, 8 miles (13 km) south-east of Kingston-upon-Thames, and 13 miles (21 km) south of Central London. On the North Downs, it is on three of the four main compass points separated from other settlements by open area buffers with Metropolitan Green Belt status. Banstead Downs, although a fragment of its larger historic area and spread between newer developments, is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). One of the Banstead wards is "Banstead Village". The contiguous ward of Nork, which contains Banstead station, shares in many amenities of Banstead and is included in county-level population analyses of Banstead but not the central-government-drawn Banstead Built-up Area. The latter takes in Burgh Heath and held 15,469 residents as at the 2011 census. == History == The earliest recorded mention of Banstead was in an Anglo-Saxon charter of AD 967, in the reign of King Edgar. The settlement appears in the Domesday Book (1086) as Benestede. The first element is probably the Anglo Saxon word bene, meaning bean, and the second element stede refers to an inhabited place without town status (as in farmstead).