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Key Holders in Wimbledon

Key Holders in Wimbledon

For Key Holding in Wimbledon We offer a fully insured, UK wide Key Holding service for commercial and domestic customers (including a number of ‘sensitive’ and business critical sites where fast response is of utmost importance) and in accordance with BS7984 (Key holding and Response code of practice)

The handling of keys in Wimbledon demands the ultimate in client’s confidence and trust. Serjeant Security earns this trust by devising the most stringent control measures applied without fail.

An SIA licence is required if you undertake the licensable activities of a key holder and your services are supplied for the purposes of or in connection with any contract to a consumer. Which Serjeant Security hold full accreditation by this authority.

BS 7984 gives recommendations for the management, staffing and operation of an organisation providing key holding and response services in Wimbledon on a contracted basis. It also provides best practice in security companies and principles to which it supply’s.

Contact our security control centre in Sevenoaks on: 0845 023 0335

Wimbledon is a district and town of southwest London, England, 7.1 miles (11.4 km) southwest of the centre of London at Charing Cross, in the London Borough of Merton, south of Wandsworth, northeast of New Malden, northwest of Mitcham, west of Streatham and north of Sutton. Wimbledon had a population of 68,187 in 2011 which includes the electoral wards of Abbey, Dundonald, Hillside, Trinity, Village, Raynes Park and Wimbledon Park.

It is house to the Wimbledon Tennis Championships and New Wimbledon Theatre, and contains Wimbledon Common, one of the largest areas of common estate in London along bearing in mind a Wimbledon Tennis Club. The residential and retail Place is split into two sections known as the “village” and the “town”, with the High Street innate the rebuilding of the indigenous medieval village, and the “town” having first developed gradually after the building of the railway station in 1838.