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Our Plumbers and Boiler Engineers
are always at your service 24/7 for all of your Plumbing and Central Heating needs!
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Looking For An Brockley Plumber ? : Brockley Emergency Plumbers have a team of engineers covering the whole of Brockley and Its Surrounding Areas.
We provide an immediate response and particular attention to customer satisfaction, time, and quality of service.
Plumber Brockley: If you are looking for a plumber our Brockley plumbers have no call out charge.
Plumbing Brockley: Brockley Emergency Plumbers offer an honest competitvely priced service along with a reliable and punctual appointment system.
We will provide you with a fully qualified Brockley Emergency Plumber at a reasonable cost.
Plumber In Brockley: We offer "A Class" engineers to cover all of your Boiler, Plumbing, Central Heating, and Drainage needs.
Plumbing Repair Brockley: We can offer you emergency plumbers in Brockley on a genuine 24 hour, 365 day basis.
24 hour Plumbing Brockley: Having a 24 hour, 365 day service means that we can provide a solution to your problem day or night.
Gas Safe Engineers Brockley: All of our boiler engineers are gas safe registered in accordance with new legislation taken over from CORGI.
Central Heating Repair Brockley: Our qualified heating and boiler engineers are main agent trained and fully approved.
Drain Clearance Brockley: For blocked drains Brockley is covered by our team of specialist fully equipped drainage engineers
Drain Repair: drain clearance, drain jetting or drainage repair? Our specialist team are on hand for all types of drain problems.
Brockley, SE4
Brockley is an area of the London Borough of Lewisham in England. It is covered by London postal district SE4, and lies on the old boundary between the Lewisham and Deptford parishes. The name 'Brockley' is derived from either 'Broca's woodland clearing', or a wood where badgers are seen (broc is the Old English for badger).
The area remained agricultural until the nineteenth century, the most notable building of the time being the 'Brockley Jack', a hostelry reputed to be a favourite amongst highwaymen. The market gardens were famous for the enormous Victoria rhubarb which were fertilised by night soil from London. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, the Wickham and Drake families developed the north of Brockley with large villas, terraces and semi-detached houses. This part became the Brockley conservation area in 1974, when also the Brockley Society was formed.
A local open space, Hilly Fields, was saved from development by the Commons Preservation Society and local groups in the 1880s and 1890s (including Octavia Hill, one of the founders of the National Trust). In 1894, after being bought with the proceeds of private donations and funding from the London County Council, the fields were transformed from old brickpits and ditches into a park. The park became a regular meeting place for the Suffragette movement between 1907 and 1914. The old West Kent Grammar School (then later renamed Brockley County Grammar School), now Prendergast School, a Grade II listed building, is situated at the top of the hill (with a listed mural in the pre-Raphaelite style in its hall), and close by, a stone circle was erected in 2000 as a millennium project by a group of local artists, which won a Civic Trust Award in 2004