For superb restoration of your Sussex Wooden Floors...
For superb restoration of your Sussex Wooden Floors...
Call upon the Sussex Floor Sanding Specialists!
Reliable and knowledgeable with over twenty years’ experience
Can restore all kinds of floors from solid boards to parquet blocks
The complete service repairs, sanding and refinishing
99% dust free sanding with a modern, efficient collection system
And all this begins with a free assessment of your floor! So make sure you obtain the best advice - for the best job
Contact Sussex Floor Sanding Specialists today!
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TRUSTED BY THESE WELL KNOWN BRANDS AND HUNDREDS MORE
The charms of ‘Sunny Sussex by the Sea’ have proved a magnet to creative and sporting types of every persuasion: Heading from west to east along the coast, save yourself a trip to Rome by visiting the impressive replica Sistine Chapel in Goring-by-Sea. Worthing has a set of four monstrous Bronze heads in a street off the seafront - the work of that widely-displayed sculptor, Dame Elisabeth Frink. And up the road in Broadwater cemetery, you can find the graves of two country poets. The Victorian novelist and writer Richard Jefferies was buried here in 1887. Originally from Wiltshire, he undoubtedly found additional inspiration to become ‘Prose Poet of England’s Fields and Woodlands’ from the Sussex Downs. So much did the naturalist WH Hudson admire Jefferies that he asked to be buried nearby: a request granted in 1922. Lancing College with its impressive (yet unfinished) French Gothic-style chapel lies resplendent below the Downs west of the Adur. Evelyn Waugh is one of its most-celebrated old boys. Hove has a plethora of blue plaques to famous residents, including the master cricketer, Jack Hobbs - and the British-born Hollywood actress, Elizabeth Allan (who played David Copperfield’s mother in the 1935 movie). Hastings was the venue of the wedding of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Elizabeth Siddal, the flame-haired beauty of the Millais’ painting ‘Ophelia’. She was laid to rest at Highgate cemetery with a set of his unpublished poems (and her tomb later opened to retrieve them...). And Eastbourne should be noted for enabling Claude Debussy - on a visit in 1905 - to finish the composition of ‘La Mer’ at the Grand Hotel. |
Before & After
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