Rope access window cleaners in Kingston with years of experience
All our rope access window cleaning in Kingston is carried out by professionals. Our staff have had many years honing their skills. This has enabled them to adapt to abseiling very easily and still maintain the standards required.
Every team member completes the IRATA training course every 3 years. This not only teaches abseiling skills but also teaches the importance of working in a safe environment and how to achieve this.
We consider ourselves very fortunate to be surrounded by such awesome teams.
High Level Window Cleaning in Kingston
Professional rope access window cleaning for your building in Kingston.
Over 20 years window cleaning experience in Kingston
Highest standards produce by experienced staff.
Level 3 Team leaders within Kingston
IRATA Level 3 technicians always on site for highly trained supervision.
Our services
Rope Access Window Cleaning for Kingston And Surrounding Counties
Window cleaning at the Walkie Talkie
The concave construction of this London building presented many issues for access. They were all overcome to achieve our goal.
Cleaning windows from BMU at Vauxhall
The brand new building in Vauxhall, London needed a complete builders clean of the glass and façade. Extreme delivered again.
Windows being cleaned at Broadgate Tower
The BMU on this building was out of action. Extreme were called in to keep the PPM schedule on target with no loss of service.
Abseiling to clean windows at Victoria Street
Another BMU breakdown. All pre-planned window cleaning could remain on schedule by employing Extreme.
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Facts About Kingston
Kingston History
Under Roman rule, the route was paved. In Anglo-Saxon times the road became known as Watling Street. A paving stone on Kilburn High Road commemorates the route of Watling Street. Kilburn Priory was built on the banks of a stream variously recorded as Cuneburna, Kelebourne and Cyebourne.
The first two names perhaps imply meanings of “King’s Bourne” and “Cattle Bourne”. The word Bourne is the southern variant of burn, as still commonly used in the technical term, winterbourne – a watercourse which tends to dry up in dry periods. The river is known today as the Westbourne. From the 1850s many of its feeder ditches were diverted into combined sewers feeding away to the east.
General Info
The first surviving record of Kingston is from AD 838 as the site of a meeting between King Egbert of Wessex and Ceolnoth, Archbishop of Canterbury. Kingston lay on the boundary between the ancient kingdoms of Wessex and Mercia, until in the early tenth century when King Athelstan united both to create the kingdom of England. According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, two tenth-century kings were consecrated in Kingston.
There are certain other kings who are said to have been crowned there, but for whom the evidence is less substantial: Edward the Elder, Edmund I, Eadred, Eadwig, Edgar the Peaceful and Edward the Martyr. It was later thought that the coronations were conducted in the chapel of St Mary, which collapsed in 1730.