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Your new wooden floors in Stoke Newington
Follies are those extravagant buildings of no particular purpose built to gratify the egos of landowners with more money than sense - let alone taste. Yet in Green Lanes is a deceptive example that did provide a vital function... On that level, it can rank with the natural wooden floor - playing its part in the enhancement of so many buildings - domestic and commercial. So make sure your floors perform to their full potential: if they’re shabby, marked or more seriously damaged... Call on the specialists! The Stoke Newington Floor Sanding Experts! And receive the best advice from a firm of twenty years’ experience - On whatever your floor needs for its type: from hardwood boards to parquet blocks. With the complete floor restoration service: repair and replacement of damaged timber; sanding away old paint and sealant to bare wood; staining for a fresh look to match your decor; resealing - with oil, wax or lacquer for a fresh protective layer. All completed to the highest standards of workmanship: using the best quality products. And 99% dust free sanding: with our unique system that collects dust outside the room.
Delay no further. Ask for your free assessment today.
Your choice for a new floor - the Stoke Newington Floor Sanding Specialists. |
TRUSTED BY THESE WELL KNOWN BRANDS AND HUNDREDS MORE.
The Stoke Newington Pumping station looks like a castle with its battlements and towers - and was said to be modelled on Stirling. It played its role in ensuring a safe water supply to Victorian North East London. The story began in 1609 when the capital’s population growth required more water than could be supplied from Hampstead and Highgate Ponds. Enter a Welsh jeweller, Hugh Middleton, whose ambitious New Canal scheme diverted water from the Lea at Amwell near Ware in Herts - to arrive some thirty miles down to what is now Rosebery Avenue. Two centuries later, the clean water act of 1852 required more stringent water management. In 1856, the station was opened in Stoke Newington, where the canal went underground. It contained six steam engines, with its towers and turrets having a function, enclosing chimneys and water pumps. Redundant by 1971, the Castle reopened as a climbing centre in 1995. |
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Bona Adhesive
With over 23 years of sanding knowledge,
we're dedicated to making sure that your wooden
floors always get the best restoration service there is.