WATER COOLERS SALFORD, GREATER MANCHESTER

Looking for Water Coolers Salford? We deliver and install water coolers and water boilers to Salford and many other parts of Greater Manchester. If your office, school or workplace is in Salford and you are looking for water coolers or water boilers then you can get directly in touch with our main office, located in Yorkshire. You will be directly put through to James, Managing Director of our Yorkshire branch. James can give you the guidance and advice you may need to choose the right system for your requirements. Furthermore, with James being local to you he will be able to personally install your system for you!

Venture over to our contact page HERE where you can find a phone number and contact form where you can contact James.

Finally, you may also be interested to find out more about our Filter change and sanitisation programme. This is a special service only for Active Water cooler customers. Find out more HERE

The City of Salford sits on the opposite side of the river Irwell which forms part of its boundary with Manchester and has an industrial past that goes back far longer than the Industrial Revolution. As an old town, Salford has been developing for about 700 years.

Before the introduction of cotton there was a considerable trade in woollen goods. Other cottage industries prevalent at this time included clogging, cobbling, weaving and brewing.

Salford is also home to some very well-known buildings. Probably the most famous is Salford Lads’ Club. This recreational club, established in 1903 and located in Ordsall, is a listed building and gained international fame in 1986 when the pop band, The Smiths, posed in front of it for the inside cover of their album, The Queen Is Dead. A report by English Heritage said “The building is thought to be the most complete example of this rare form of social provision to survive in England.”

In 2007, the Manchester Evening News reported that the club was third in a nationwide hunt to find the most iconic buildings in the country.  Salford has some notable people connected to it, including Emmeline Pankhurst, one of the founders of the British suffragette movement. Other celebrities from Salford include Manchester United footballer, Paul Scholes, the band Happy Mondays and poet John Cooper Clarke.

Salford Quays, at the eastern end of the Manchester Ship Canal on the site of the former Manchester Docks, became one of the first and largest urban regeneration projects in the United Kingdom after the closure of the dockyards in 1982. Salford Quays were redeveloped and became home to the new Media centre and is home to the BBC including CBBC, BBC sport and ITV studios.