Safe Installation E14 Limehouse
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Richmond 30K (Size 2) Digital Safe Fitted in East London
(case study 01358)
Here's another safe that we've installed in East London, we've installed many many safes in East London. This particular one was in the base of a wardrobe with a sliding door. The floor was concrete and the safe was bolted to the concrete floor using expanding anchors.
This particular safe is a Richmond 30K (Size 2) Digital Safe which is battery operated using a 9 volt battery. It also has an emergency terminal on the front of the safe, where if the battery should go flat you can hold a 9 volt battery to the two terminals and power the circuitry externally. You can enter your code (it has non-volatile memory - so doesn't forget your code). Then you can open the safe and then change the battery.
The area was all cleaned up and hoovered after installation. The client was shown how to use the safe, how to set their own code, how to operate the keypad and how to change the battery.
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If you have a requirement for safe installation in London E14 or anywhere in London and the Home Counties, please get in touch.
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Click here to see the Richmond 30K (Size 2) Digital Safe
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Limehouse is a pocket of East London where industrial grit meets high-end waterfront living. Historically the heart of London’s maritime trade and home to the city’s original Chinatown, it serves as a tranquil, atmospheric bridge between the glass towers of Canary Wharf and the creative energy of Wapping. The neighborhood is defined by the Limehouse Basin, a picturesque marina where colorful canal boats bob against a backdrop of luxury conversions. Wandering through its narrow streets, you’ll find the haunting beauty of St. Anne’s Limehouse, a Nicholas Hawksmoor masterpiece that stands as a sentinel over the Thames. The area’s character is best captured along Narrow Street, home to historic pubs like The Grapes—part-owned by Sir Ian McKellen—and Gordon Ramsay’s The Bread Street Kitchen. With its cobblestones, hidden stairs leading to the river, and the intersection of the Regent’s Canal and the Thames Path, Limehouse offers a moody, cinematic slice of London history that feels worlds away from the nearby financial hub.



