Cleaning Services in Goodge Street, London

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Our professional Goodge Street cleaning services company will clean, dust, and polish your whole home or office. Our personnel can come weekly or monthly, whichever is more convenient for you. The cleaning staff provides a variety of professional cleaning services to commercial spaces, offices, retail stores, and homes throughout Goodge Street. Do you need a routine cleaning service in Goodge Street? Moving into a new home? Or getting ready for a special occasion or event? Or maybe change of seasons? Whatever your home cleaning needs, we can help. Our professional cleaning services in Goodge Street cover every area and thoroughly get the job done. After our visit you will step into a home cleaned to your complete satisfaction. Cross a major chore off your to-do list and let us take care of the house or office cleaning. Then savor the pleasure of knowing your whole home has been cleaned by a professional team you can trust. Sweep out the past and refresh with weekly service - our company's most popular choice.
Covered postcodes: W1
Information about Goodge Street
Goodge Street is a London Underground station on Tottenham Court Road. It is on the Northern Line between Tottenham Court Road and Warren Street, and is in Travelcard Zone 1. The platforms still retain the tiling pattern of the original Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway (CCEHR) company.
It was opened on 22 June 1907 as Tottenham Court Road but changed to the present name on 3 September 1908 when an interchange was built between the previously separate (and differently named) Northern Line and Central Line stations at the present Tottenham Court Road. Goodge Street station changed its name on the same date.
Goodge Street is one of the few tube stations to still rely on lifts rather than escalators to transport passengers to and from street level. In addition, it is one of the few tube stations with lifts to use the original scheme of separate exit and entrance areas. Although the station is extremely busy at peak times, the flow is heavily one-sided. Very few people enter the station when the majority are exiting, and vice-versa, and 4 full lifts travelling in one direction, often return in the opposite direction with only 3 people between them.
It is one of eight London Underground stations which has a deep-level air-raid shelter underneath it. It was from Goodge Street station in 1944 that General Eisenhower broadcast the announcement of D-Day. The shelter has two entrances - one on Chenies Street (pictured) and the other on Tottenham Court Road next to the American Church.
Source: WikiPedia