Hygiene Services Kent
Our experts can help you with a range of products and services including:
- Sanitary collection and disposal.
- Aircare purification and fragrancing
- Hand sanitising and drying
- Dental waste and collection servicing
- Sharps waste and collection servicing
- Entrance and workplace mats
Call us for a free quote on 02920 809098
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phs Group are the leading hygiene services provider in the UK, Spain and Ireland. With over 120,000 customers over 300,000 locations, supporting everything from restaurants to offices, and from hospitals to schools, we meet the needs of up to 100 million people.
Healthcare, washroom and floorcare hygiene are our business, and alongside our hygiene experts we have specialist businesses meeting the needs of specific businesses.
The leading washroom services supplier in the UK. Let us show you why, get a free quote.
We work with organisations of all sizes right across the UK and Ireland to ensure they meet their duty of care obligations and provide fully-serviced, hygienic washrooms that meet the needs of their specific visitors and staff.
Industry insights from our experts
Facts about Kent
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In October 1532, while on their way to Calais to meet King Francis I, newlyweds Henry VIII and Ann Boleyn stopped off at Shurland Hall near Eastchurch on the Isle of Sheppey. The royal couple spent three days of their honeymoon at the home of Thomas Cheyne, a particular favourite of Ann Boleyn, who is said to have become nearly bankrupt in order to accommodate His Royal Highness and his impressive appetite.
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The world’s oldest horse fossil was found at Studd Hill, Herne Bay in 1838 and has recently been dated as 54 million years old, giving Herne Bay the special privilege of being considered the official birthplace of the horse.
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Kent is home to one of only three ‘Royal’ towns in the UK. Royal Tunbridge Wells was granted its official regal title in 1909 after Edward VII granted the prefix in special recognition of the town’s connections with the royal family since the Stuart dynasty.
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John Buchan wrote The 39 Steps while bedridden in Kent. Suffering from stomach ulcers, he wrote his famed novel to distract himself from the excruciating pain. He even took inspiration from the nearby North Foreland and the 78 steps from the villa to the beach, although why the number of steps was halved is a mystery.
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Leeds Castle is known as the ‘Ladies’ Castle’ because so many future Queens of England have resided within its protective walls. Eleanor of Castile and Margaret of France, Edward I’s two wives; Philippa of Hainault, wife of Edward III; Catherine de Valois, Henry V’s spouse; Catherine of Aragon, the first wife of Henry VIII, even his daughter and future queen Elizabeth all called the Kent castle home.