Ickenham is mentioned as Ticheham in Domesday its name deriving from 'Homestaed or village of a man called Ticia'. Situated in the northeast corner of Middlesex close to Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire it remained very much a village until after the First World War when it was gradually overtaken by the expansion of London.
Today Ickenham is an extremely attractive leafy suburb in North West London and has some fine old buildings including an attractive old moated manor house and Swakeleys, with its ornamented chimney stacks is a renowned Dutch-gabled Jacobean Manor. Ickenham Underground station is on the Metropolitan and Piccadilly Line.
Church Place is a charming courtyard development of 21 houses and four flats behind the village pond in Ickenham not...
Facilities include a resident manager and emergency alarm service, guest bedroom and attractive gardens and grounds. It is just a...
Facilities include non-resident management staff and emergency alarm service, lift, lounge, laundry, dining room and garden.
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Facilities include non resident management and emergency alarm service, lift, lounge, laundry, guest facilities and garden.
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