|
|
Removal Office in Ely, CB6

These Removal Office companies are located in Ely
Handy Moves
Company Type: Removals
Unit 53 , 63 Jeddo Rd
London, W12 9EE
|
Tel. 020 8746 7129 Tel. 08000 380 390 |
London Removals
Company Type: Removals
26 York Street, Mayfair
London, W1U 6PZ
|
Tel. 020 8811 8933 |
Man and Van
Company Type: Removals
UNIT 36, 88-90 HATTON GARDEN
London, EC1N 8PN
|
Tel. 020 8811 8922 |
A & M Removals
Company Type: Crate Hire
Unit 6 Firdale Farm 197 Mildenhall Rd
, CB7 5NT
|
Tel. 0800-345 7875
|
Doves Removals
Company Type: Removal Company
73 St. Johns Rd
, CB6 3BG
|
Tel. 01353 662467
|
Easy Mover
Company Type: Office Removal Companies
Abbey Stadium Newmarket Rd
, CB5 8LN
|
Tel. 01223 245189
|
Grey & Co
Company Type: Removal Office
7 Dalton Way
, CB6 1DS
|
Tel. 01353 662092
|
The following Removal Office are the ones that we have found closest to Ely
Annas Of Camberley
Company Type: Office Removal Companies
53 Perry Oaks
, RG12 2UH
|
Tel. 0800-052 1249
|
A Team
Company Type: Office Removals
19 Calfridus Way
, RG12 9EP
|
Tel. 01344 457416
|
Kingsbury Transport
Company Type: Crate Hire
Longshot Ind Est/Longshot La
, RG12 1RL
|
Tel. 01344 481290
|
P JS Removals
Company Type: Removal Office
108 Viking
, RG12 8UW
|
Tel. 01344 429828
|
Space Station
Company Type: Removal Office
149 St. Pauls Av
, SL2 5EN
|
Tel. 0800-458 3891
|
Greens
Company Type: Removal Company
Baytrees Little Sutton Lane
, SL3 8AN
|
Tel. 01753 542204
|
Greens Removals
Company Type: Office Moves
Baytrees/Little Sutton Lane
, SL3 8AN
|
Tel. 01753 542204
|
Removal Porters
Company Type: Crate Hire
30 Quantock Cl
, SL3 8UD
|
Tel. 07894 248628
|
Wokingham Removals
Company Type: Removal Company
1/Mayfield Cottages/Red Rose
, RG42 5JD
|
Tel. 01344 444659
|
Spanish Removals
Company Type: Office Removals
Hellman House
, SL3 0EL
|
Tel. 0870 4202 950
|
AB Removals
Company Type: Removals
41 Telford Cr
, RG5 4QT
|
Tel. 0118-969 4850
|
A Y S Business Moves Ltd
Company Type: Office Removal Companies
Old Linpac Building/Headley Rd East
, RG5 4SL
|
Tel. 0118-969 6500
|
F R 8
Company Type: Removal Office
25 Waterloo Rd
, RG45 7PB
|
Tel. 0118-979 5885
|
Cadogan Tate
Company Type: Removals
Old Wokingham Road
, RG45 6SQ
|
Tel. 013 4475 3800
|
Removal Companies in towns near Ely, CB6
News and Tips
Useful Tips On When To Book Move Out Services read more »
The hidden costs of moving read more »
How to Make Moving Less Stress-Free? read more »
Understanding the Real Purpose of a Moving Box read more »
Tips to Shield Your Properties against Moving Thieves read more »
Places of interest in Ely, CB6
Ely or ELY may also refer to:
Coveney is a village north of Cambridge in Cambridgeshire. Several bronze axes have been found here, shields and a few swords, all dating from the late Bronze Age.[1] Coveney is on a small 'island' rising to 43 feet (13 m) above sea level, some 3.5 miles (6 km) west of Ely city as the crow flies, but nearly twice that distance by the main road. The village is situated on a by-road which leaves the main Ely?Chatteris road at Wentworth crossroads, about 2 miles (3 km) south. This by-road, which has a branch to the hamlet of Wardy Hill, 1 mile (2 km) west of Coveney village, used to be the only metalled road into the parish. But the droves across Ely West Fen, by Frogs Abbey, to Downham Hythe, and from Wardy Hill to Witcham have recently been made up for wheeled traffic.
The London orbital motorway, the M25, passes just south of the village (Junction 20) on an imposing viaduct across the River Gade valley. Kings Langley was the home of the makers of Ovaltine and the listed factory facade is now all that is left and still stands alongside the railway line among a new housing development. The Ovaltine factory itself has recently been converted into a series of flats and duplexes.
The settlement was called by the name Henamsted or Hean-Hempsted, i.e. High Hempstead, in Anglo-Saxon times and in William the Conqueror's time by the name of Hemel-Amstede.[1] The name is referred to in the Domesday Book as "Hamelamesede", but in later centuries it became Hamelhamsted. In old English, "-stead" or "-stede" simply meant a place, such as the site of a building or pasture, as in clearing in the woods, and this suffix is used in the names of other English places such as Hamstead and Berkhamsted.[2]
It was constructed in 1973 to reduce the congestion at the original standard layout roundabout where seven roads intersected, it was one of the first bi-directional roundabouts to be constructed in the UK. At the junction of each road with the roundabout a mini-roundabout is present and subject to the normal clockwise direction of travel for all traffic. Between these mini-roundabouts however traffic is permitted to travel clockwise or anti-clockwise around the larger roundabout, the expectation being that drivers would choose the shorter route with less stationary traffic.
Information by Wikipedia.com
|