Sitemap

Clitheroe » Business

Clitheroe Business

The UFindUs business directory provides you with information on a range of local businesses together with their services. The business directory is an efficient way to locate businesses that you require, whether it be catering and cleaning or computers and finance. The business directories subheadings ensure that searching for the relevant business or services could not be easier. The businesses listed range from shops and stores providing equipment and products to businesses to help with queries on finance and legal issues. The business directory can aid you with corporate entertainment, development training, and advertising and marketing through to office equipment and safety assessment, as you can see the business directory caters for a vast number of service providers in and around Britain.

About Clitheroe - show infohide info

Clitheroe is a small town in Lancashire, England. It lies on the southern edge of the Forest of Bowland and is often used as a base for tourists in the area. The most notable building in the town is a Norman keep, quarreled as one of the smallest in the country. The town elected two members to the Unreformed House of Commons. The Great Reform Act reduced this to one. The place is now believed to be the most central town in Britain. Clitheroe enjoys one of the lowest rates of unemployment in the UK. This is largely due to the presence of several companies that each employ hundreds. Most significant are Ultraframe, Castle Cement and Tarmac. Castle Cement has been criticised for using industrial waste in its kilns, which locals claim produces poisonous dioxins. Caastle Cement claims that its filters remove these and that government inspectors have approved the plant. However, locals continue to campaign for the use of industrial waste as fuel to cease. Towns near Clitheroe include Blackburn, Preston, Lancaster, Morecambe, Burnley and Chorley.

Companies in Clitheroe by type

Business type (e.g. Florist)
or Name (e.g. Fastfix Plumbers)
Location (e.g. Bradford)