To request a quote click here

      

    Telephone 0800 781 9629 

Image

 

 

 

 

Pick & Move Limited 

Suite 10,

571 Finchley Road

Hampstead

London

NW3 7BN

 

Company number

5333317

 

 Vat number

859110816

 

 

t:    0800 781 9629

m:  07949 501 476

m:  07932 268 443

 

 

Removal Services Balham:

 

Moving House, Man and Van Balham Removals. Moving Company Balham,  SW12,  Removals and Storage Balham.

 

Removals Balham – Pick & Move are London based house removal and office removals company specializing in all aspects of house removals, Self storage for residents and businesses in Balham and surrounding areas

We offer extensive list of Removal service including flat removals, house removals to and from Balham area, house moving, Man and Van Service, London moves and Removals.

Our success and reputation in the removals industry has been built on the strength of personal recommendations, professional, reliable and competitive pricing, areas we continually striving to improve in our dedication to you, the customers without compromising quality and consistency.                                           

Affordable, yet professional in every way we can tailored your move and plan everything from packing to full removal and storage for Balham and surrounding areas.
Our objective is to provide high quality removals service to residential and businesses in London and UK

Some keyword phrases you can use to find us include the following: removals, man and van, house removal, house moving, movers, removal companies, moving service, man with a van, man and van hire, Self Storage. 

 

Overview of the area:

 

Balham began to develop as a London suburb at the second half of the19th century. Balham is situated between four south London Commons: Wandsworth Common to the west, Clapham Common to the north, adjoining Tooting Beck Common to the east, and the Tooting Graveney Common to the south - the latter two historically distinct areas are referred to by both Wandsworth council and some local people as Tooting Common.

 

The railway station opened in 1856 and was a small build from wood in Chestnut Grove. It moved to its present position in 1863. The railway line divided Balham into two.  Daniel Dendy built more than eighty low rate properties in the 1860s. He named one of the new streets after himself and another after his daughter Kate.

 

The lower end of Bedford Hill was developed in the 1840s and it was the new Bedford Hotel that housed the inquest into the mysterious death of Charles Bravo, the resident of the Priory, in 1876. The High Road became a mixed block development of flats and shops. Various developers quickly bought up the remaining open land and created more streets of the typical Victorian suburbs. Such men included William Damell, James Harber and Alfred Heaver.

 

Over the next 100 years Balham hardly changed. Except for some bomb damage in World War II and some isolated redevelopment much of 'old' Balham still remains.

    

 

 

 

 

image

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

image
Site Map