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Facade Cleaning in Kings Cross
Cleaning building facades from top to bottom, no matter how tall your building.
Natural stone facade cleaning in Kings Cross can be accessed and cleaned efficiently and effectively by using rope access methods. Using this method, the need for local authority permits is totally eradicated, allowing works to proceed immediately. Using professional stone cleaning equipment we can roll back the years to make your building look like new.
Brick cleaning
Brick buildings become dirty as much as any other building. We will not only clean away the dirt and grime, we can revitalise the colour. Using a range of bio-degradable chemicals, we can restore the colour of red or yellow bricks.
Contact UsGlass facade cleaning in Kings Cross
Glass facade cleaning in Kings Cross takes place by abseilers using traditional window cleaning tools. External windows, internal atriums, after builders cleaning or regular maintenance cleans, our abseilers are experienced in all manner of glass cleaning.
Contact UsAluminium cladding cleaning
Aluminium cladding in Kings Cross can become extremely dirty over time. Warehouses that have many lorries coming and going will become soiled with traffic film. Using our steam cleaning systems, this grime is washed away leaving a lasting first impression for your visitors.
Contact UsOur services
Rope Access Facade Cleaning Services for Kings Cross And Surrounding Counties
Residential property Stone Facade Cleaning
Façade cleaning at this residential property in Kings Cross, which was not of any great height but, had no access for other forms of access equipment. Abseiling was the solution and the results were outstanding.
Stone Steam Cleaning in London
This beautiful natural stone building was looking tired from the day to day London traffic. Rope access was seen as the most cost-effective method of access.
Concrete Facade Cleaning in Kings Cross
This car park in Essex was filthy. It hadn’t been cleaned, ever. As the access to three elevations was extremely tight, abseiling was the only method that could achieve the results.
Facade Cleaning in Kings Cross
A new acquisition for our client needed a freshen up. Out of hours abseiling was the best way to clean this building in the heart of the City of London.
Brick colour restoration
Before colour restoration
This client requested a test patch before assigning us the job of cleaning their building. We carried this out with amazing results.
After colour restoration
These are the pictures of the test patch that we sent to the client. Her reaction was simply ‘WOW’. That’s the perfect response for us.
Torik Stone Cleaning System Features
150 degrees centigrade steam cleaning power
Provides a continues flow of superheated water to penetrate stone and deep clean, removing organic growth & ground in dirt.
We use Tensid (uk) Ltd
Providers of specialist cleaning equipment and specialist cleaning chemicals to professionals.
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Facts About Kings Cross
Kings Cross History
The current name has its origin in a monument to King George IV which stood from 1830 to 1845 at “the king’s crossroads” where New Road, Gray’s Inn Road, and Pentonville Road met. The monument was sixty feet high and topped by an eleven-foot-high statue of the king; it was described by Walter Thornbury as “a ridiculous octagonal structure crowned by an absurd statue”.
The statue itself, which cost no more than £25, was constructed of bricks and mortar, and finished in a manner that gave it the appearance of stone “at least to the eyes of common spectators”. The architect was Stephen Geary, who exhibited a model of “the Kings Cross” at the Royal Academy in 1830. The upper story was used as a camera obscura while the base housed first a police station, and later a public house.
General Info
Kings Cross is a district in Central London, England, 1.5 miles north of Charing Cross. It is served by London King’s Cross railway station, the terminus of one of the major rail routes between London and the North. The area has been regenerated since the mid-1990s with the terminus of the Eurostar rail service at St Pancras International opening in 2007 and the rebuilding of King’s Cross station, a major redevelopment in the north of the area.
In the Harry Potter books, King’s Cross station is where the protagonist boards the train for Hogwarts. However, the author, JK Rowling, later admitted she mixed up Kings Cross with the next door station, Euston. The railway station has put up a sign for the fictional “Platform 9 3⁄4” described in the books, and embedded part of a luggage trolley halfway into the wall.