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In 2007 Rightmove bought 67% of Holiday Lettings Limited. [6] In May 2008, HBOS, one of the founding investors, sold its stake in Rightmove. [7] According to Forbes, Rightmove operates on a two-sided model which serves a vast "audience" for property listings on one side and 20,000 advertisers of available properties on the other side. [8]
Metropolitan Thames Valley, formed from the merge of Metropolitan Housing Trust and Thames Valley Housing Association in 2018, is a housing association (HA) in the United Kingdom with origins back to the 1950s.
The town of Bracknell has two railway stations, Bracknell and Martins Heron, both of which are on the Waterloo to Reading Line, built by the London and South Western Railway and now operated by South Western Railway. Bracknell is a commuter centre with its residents travelling in both directions (westwards to Reading and eastwards to London ...
Bracknell is a constituency [n 1] in Berkshire represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Peter Swallow, from the Labour Party. [ n 2 ] It was created for the 1997 general election , largely replacing the abolished county constituency of East Berkshire .
Boehringer Ingelheim UK is off the A3095 in west Bracknell in Easthampstead; nearby to the north is Waitrose; to the east along the A3095 is Panasonic UK; next door to the south is IHS UK (owner of Jane's Information Group) and HHI Europe (construction equipment); further along the A3095 is BMW (GB); BMW sold their first model in the UK in 1966 ...
Forest Park is a suburb of Bracknell, in Berkshire, England. It is part of the Swinley Forest ward and named after the Crown Estate of Swinley Forest. [1] It was built in the late 1980s as the town continued to expand. The estate lies east of the A322 road and is approximately 1.2 miles (1.9 km) south-east of Bracknell town centre.
L&Q (London & Quadrant Housing Trust) is a housing association operating in Greater London, the South East, East Anglia, and parts of the North West (under its subsidiary company Trafford Housing Trust).
The Guinness Trust was founded in 1890 by the then Edward Cecil Guinness, [4] a great-grandson of the founder of the Guinness Brewery, to help homeless people in London and Dublin.