House Cleaning Greenwich

Only a housewife knows how tiresome and time consuming the cleaning of your home is. You may have the time to vacuum a bit and dust, but do you have enough time to do all the other chores the cleaning requires?

The windows need cleaning; you have a lot a laundry to do and a lot of ironing. But between the work and the kids you never get around to do it in time.

We can help you with all those chores and more. We are the London Tenancy Cleaning and we know how to make homes sparkle. In just a few hours your home will be immaculately clean without lifting a finger. We will clean it from top to bottom and will tidy it. All you have to do is enjoy your family time in front of the TV or while you diner.

Here is what the house cleaning includes: mopping, vacuuming, cleaning of all sanitary wear, chrome features, sinks, taps, showers, toilets, bathtubs, cleaning of all windows and doors, dusting and polishing of all surfaces, cleaning of all cupboards and wardrobes, cleaning of all kitchen appliances and removing of all grease and grime, wiping of all skirting boards, wiping of all mirrors and other wall hangings, laundering, ironing.

The house cleaning is also suitable for: one off cleaning; spring cleaning, pre tenancy cleaning, end of tenancy cleaning, after party cleaning, after builders cleaning, office cleaning.

Book our house cleaning and sit back and enjoy your free time. You can do this by calling any of the numbers or write to any of the emails provided on the site.

House cleaning service in Greenwich, London

Greenwich
Greenwich is best known for its maritime history and for giving its name to the Greenwich Meridian (0° longitude) and Greenwich Mean Time. The town became the site of a Royal palace, the Palace of Placentia from the 15th century, and was the birthplace of many in the House of Tudor, including Henry VIII and Elizabeth I. Georgian and Victorian architecture dominates in the town centre which spreads to the west of the park and Royal Naval college.
Greenwich Park
In the 15th century the park was mostly heathland and probably used for hawking. In the next century, deer were introduced by Henry VIII for hunting, and a small collection of deer is maintained today in an area to the south east. James I enclosed the park with a brick wall, twelve feet high and two miles (3 km) long at a cost of £2000, much of which remains and defines the modern boundary.
Greenwich Peninsula
Greenwich Peninsula is an area of South London, England, located in the London Borough of Greenwich. The peninsula is bounded on three sides by a loop of the Thames, between the Isle of Dogs and Silvertown. To the south is the rest of Greenwich, to the south-east is Charlton. The peninsula lies within the London Borough of Greenwich.
Westcombe Park
Its most notable existing landmark is Woodlands House, in Mycenae Road. This attractive, four-storey Georgian villa (architect: George Gibson) still lies in its own grounds and was built between 1774 and 1776 for John Julius Angerstein, a Lloyd’s underwriter and merchant whose collection of old master paintings was bought for the nation in 1824, following his death, to form the nucleus of the National Gallery, London.