May 11
4
Removals to St Denis France
Small and full size removals between UK and St-Denis. We can offer to you an economic way to transport your household between any place in St-Denis and UK. All our removals are based on 15 cbm van service but we can easily arrange any bigger vehicle to fit your removal.
From student removals (even a few boxes or suitcases) to full size removals – all fully insured. We are holding a specialist policy for movers provided by AXA. This policy will cover any removal between UK and St-Denis up to £20.000
We can organise your office removal / relocation between UK and St-Denis – Professional drivers will take care of your computers and any electronic devices. Straps, blankets, boxes – all to protect your furniture and transport it in a safe manner.
Transport St Denis France
Transport services between UK and St-Denis. We can organise transport of your motorbike or scooter between St-Denis and UK. Professional ramps an experienced drivers will load it on and off in safe manner. All bikes are fully insured and covered during the transport
We can transport any piece of furniture between St-Denis and UK: sofas, sideboards, armchairs or baby cots. Everything will be collected and delivered door to door with no extra stress.
We can arrange shop collection in St-Denis or UK and then deliver it to your door step
Moving to St-Denis – what should you know:
For many of the twentieth century, St-Denis, 10km north of the centre of Paris and accessible by métro (M° St-Denis-Basilique), was one of the crucial closely industrialized communities in France, and a bastion of the Communist party. Since these days, factories have closed, unemployment is rife and immigration has radically altered the ethnic mix. For bourgeois Parisians, the political threat of the banlieue rouge (“red suburbs”) has turn into the social menace of the banlieue chaude (“sizzling suburbs”). Visitors, however, are more likely to find a buoyant, youthful community – one in three of its residents are below 25, a far cry from the silver-haired centre of Paris – its satisfaction buttressed by the city’s twin sights: the traditional basilica of St-Denis and the hyper-trendy Stade-de-France, seat of the 1998 World Cup final.
