Mobile tyres fitting service in Horndean Hampshire
We offer the lowest priced tyres and a mobile tyres
fitting service for Horndean Hampshire. See our tyres price
check comparison. No call out charge. All leading brands
of car tyres, van tyres, 4X4 tyres & run-flat tyres. We
fit tyres at your place of work or home driveway. Tyres
fitting and balancing is fully guaranteed. Also car
batteries. Our low prices for tyres and car batteries
are fully inclusive, no hidden extras. We don't have
expensive tyres depots so our prices are always low.
We offer a complete range of tyres backed up by our
efficient and cost effective mobile tyres fitting
service for Horndean Hampshire. So, rather than having to
travel to a traditional tyre depot to have tyres fitted,
you remain at home or at work and we come to you. This
is much more convenient… and, it also greatly reduces
our operating costs so we are able to slash our selling
prices of tyres by up to 40%.
Unlike many companies selling tyres on-line we have a
head office call centre. This provides advice and
technical information on all aspects of tyres. Also, for
those who prefer to place their order for tyres by
telephone, rather than by buying tyres on-line, we have
a freephone facility (0800 028 9000).
We are proud of our Customer service record, and we
fully guarantee our work. Please feel free to call our
freephone telephone number if you would like personal
help and service, we are always ready and willing to
explain the choices and make sure you are happy with our
sales and service for car tyres and car batteries.
More about Horndean Hampshire
Horndean is a village in Hampshire, UK, which marks
the southern limit of the district of East Hampshire.
The village has a population of c.14,000, about the same
as the district's administrative centre of Petersfield,
though spread over a greater area. It shares the
semi-rural character of other settlements in the
district.
The village was probably best-known as the home of Gales
Brewery, which existed in the village from 1850.
Privately owned until November 2005, when it was bought
by Fuller, Smith and Turner, it was closed in April
2006. It was the largest local employer until the
opening of the Safeway, now Morrisons, supermarket in
1994.
The name Horndean is believed to mean `valley by a
horn-shaped hill`. Dean refers to the old English word
denu meaning valley. The horn-shaped hill is most likely
Horndean Down.
Horndean grew up in the early middle ages due to its
convenient position as a staging post on the road from
Portsmouth to London (now the A3). In the early 19th
century it became home to the Hon. Sir Charles Napier
Senior, father to the more famous Sir Charles Napier,
whose house, Merchistoun Hall (named after his former
home in Falkirk, Scotland), is now a Grade II listed
building and serves as the village's major community
centre.
The village experienced significant expansion in the
20th century, particularly with the building of the
Hazleton estate on the former grounds of Merchistoun
Hall in the early 1960s, and the building of the A3(M)
motorway in the 1970s, which passes under a bridge
adjacent to the village centre. The easy access to the
motorway has encouraged an influx of light industry to
the village, most of it concentrated in three major
estates, the most recent of which is Hazelton
Interchange, built in the early 1990s.
Horndean's major community centres are Merchistoun Hall
and Horndean Technology College. There is also a popular
youth centre, RKdia. Other venues include Napier Hall,
which was partially rebuilt in 2004, and the Jubilee
Hall, opened in 2002 but as yet underused. The de facto
parish church is All Saints in neighbouring
Catherington.
Courtesy of Wikimedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horndean |