AT LEWES SCAFFOLDING WE ARE A LOCAL SCAFFOLDING FIRM, OFFERING SCAFFOLDING SERVICES TO LEWES, BRIGHTON, HOVE and all surrounding areas in the SOUTH EAST OF ENGLAND
IF YOU HAVE AN ENQUIRY FOR A JOB, PLEASE CONTACT US ON BRIGHTON 01273 447495
ALOT OF PROPERTIES IN LEWES REQUIRE STREET PERMITS - AT LEWES SCAFFOLDING WE HAVE 10 MILLION POUNDS INSURANCE, ALLOWING US TO DEAL WITH ALL YOUR STREET PERMIT REQUIREMENTS.
WE ARE NOW OFFERING A FREE ROOF SURVEY WITH ALL SCAFFOLDING ERECTED, UNDERTAKEN BY OUR ROOFING AND RENOVATIONS DEPARTMENT.
At Lewes scaffolding your project is our main priority and as a local firm we are determined to make life easier in the community with regards to scaffold requirements. We know what it is like when contractors do not do a satisfactory job or do not turn up for appointments. We feel we have created a scaffolding company wwho puts the customer first. We always give 100% so why not call us today to find out more about our affordable costs! Call us today to get the ball rolling.
Emergency Scaffold Erecting
If you need emergency scaffolding Lewes, then we are able to offer a 24-hour emergency scaffolding service. We are on call always so should you ever require this service please contact us ASAP.
Please use our photo estimator for all your Lewes scaffolding needs. Click here to use our photo estimator!
WHY CHOOSE lEWES SCAFFOLDING?
THERE ARE A NUMBER OF REASONS TO CHOOSE BRIGHTON HOVE SCAFFOLDING FOR YOUR SCAFFOLDING REQUIREMENTS.
WE PRIDE OURSELVES ON OUR EFFICIENCY AND WE ARE ABLE TO HAVE QUOTATIONS SENT TO CLIENTS WITHIN 24 HOURS.
ALL OUR MEN ARE FULLY QUALIFIED ADVANCED SCAFFOLDERS, MEANING YOUR SCAFFOLDING WILL ALWAYS ADHERE TO THE MOST STRINGENT HELATH AND SAFETY POLICIES.
WE HAVE SOLUTIONS TO ALL TYPES OF SCAFFOLDING REQUIREMENTS IN THE BRIGHTON AND HOVE AREA. WE CAN CRADLE CHIMNEY’S, PUT TEMPORARY ROOFS UP AND PROVIDE NETTNG AND TOE BOARDS WHERE REQUIRED.
WE ALWAYS INSPECT OUR SCAFFOLDING PRIOR TO WORK COMMENCEMENT AND PERFORM WEEKLY CHECKS ON THE SCAFFOLDING TO ENSURE THAT HEALTH AND SAFETY REQUIREMENTS ARE MET.
ALL QUOTATIONS ARE FREE AND NO OBLIGATION, INCLUDING CONSULTATION SHOULD IT BE REQUIRED.
WE ALWAYS STRIKE SCAFFOLDING WITHIN 3 WORKING DAYS OF INSTRUCTION THIS MEANS YOU WILL NEVER BE USED AS OUR YARD!
PUNCTUALITY IS IMPORTANT TO US SO WE WILL ALWAYS ENSURE THAT WE WILL BE ON SITE WHEN WE SAY WE WILL BE ON SITE.
RISK ASSESMENTS AND METHOD STATEMENTS CAN ALWAYS BE PROVIDED FOR OUR CLIENTS WHEN REQUIRED AND WE ARE ABLE TO HAVE THESE SENT OVER WITHIN 24 HOURS OF REQUEST.
OUR MEN ARE ALWAYS COURTIOUS AND POLITE, AND NO FOUL LANGUAGE IS EVER USED, OR MISCCONDUCT.
ALARM SYSTEMS FOR SCAFFOLDING CAN BE SUPPLIED UPON REQUEST.
SO PLEASE CALL US TODAY FOR YOUR FREE QUOTATION.
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO WAIT OR MAKE APPOINTMENTS TO HAVE A QUOTATION AS WE KNOW YOUR TIME IS VALUABLE.
Click here to use our photo estimator!
Simply fill in the above form and attach a photograph/s of the scaffolding you wish to have erected. We will always have a response within 24 Hours of form submission. Try this today, or if your requirements are more urgent, please phone us directly on 01273 44749
The place-name 'Lewes' is first attested in an Anglo-Saxon charter circa 961 AD, where it appears as Læwe. It appears as Lewes in the Domesday Book of 1086. The addition of the <-s> suffix seems to have been part of a broader trend of Anglo-Norman scribes pluralising Anglo-Saxon place-names (a famous example being their rendering of Lunden as Londres, hence the modern French name for London).
The traditional derivation of Læwe, first posited by the Tudor antiquarian Laurence Nowell, derives it from the Old English language word hlæw, meaning 'hill' or 'barrow', presumably referring to School Hill (on which the historic centre of Lewes stands) or to one of the five ancient burial mounds, all now levelled, in the vicinity of St John sub Castro.[9][10]
However, this etymology has been challenged by the Swedish philologist Rune Forsberg on the grounds that the loss of the initial ⟨h⟩ in hlæw would be unlikely phonologically in this context. He suggested that the name Læwe instead derives from the rare Old English word lǣw ('wound, incision'), and reflects the fact that from the top of School Hill Lewes overlooks the narrow, steep-sided 'gash' where the River Ouse cuts through the line of the South Downs.[11] This theory was endorsed in 2011 by A Dictionary of British Place Names.[12]
A third possibility has been advanced by Richard Coates, who has argued that Læwe derives from lexowia, an Old English word meaning 'hillside, slope' (of which there is no shortage in the Lewes area). This unusual word was borrowed into Old English from Old Welsh, the Modern Welsh spelling being llechwedd. [13]