Online Florists Delivery in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, England
Eden4flowers.co.uk deliver beautiful fresh flowers in the Beaconsfield area. Your delivery can be completed as fast as 9am next day. Free Delivery is now available on selected products. Order online for our lowest prices. Our flowers and service is backed by our No Quibble Guarantee
Same Day Flowers in Beaconsfield
Through our local florists eden4flowers.co.uk offer delivery of Same Day Flowers to most areas in the UK. View our Same Day Flowers. To check on delivery coverage in Abderdeen or to order please phone us before 12 noon on the day of delivery. Our Same Day Flowers service is available Monday - Friday. Service Not available around certain busy trading periods Sundays and Bank Holiday closing days.
So much more than just flowers for delivery in Beaconsfield
- Birthday Cakes
- Hampers
- Muffins & Gourmet Muffins
- Chocolate Hampers
- Fruit Baskets
- Gift Baskets
- Value Flowers
- Luxury Flowers
- Traditional Flowers
- Balloon in a Box
- Luxury Chocolates
About Beaconsfield
The town is very well served by road and rail. The M40 runs very close to the town and is a generous 8 lanes wide. The motorway leads to London towards the east and Oxford and Birmingham to west. Local roads include the A355 which connects Amersham and Slough via Beaconsfield, although this has very heavy traffic in peak times. The A40 parallels the M40 from London to Oxford and for years was the main road between the two cities. With the building of the M40 in the 60s and 70s the road has been relieved, but it still gets heavily congested. The B474 connects the town to Hazlemere. Rail links generally run close to the motorway. Beaconsfield railway station sees services to Birmingham Snow Hill and Moor Street, and London Marylebone. Services are provided by Chiltern Railways who provide regular fast and slow services, the faster ones being able to reach London in around twenty five minutes. Beaconsfield is also a popular park and ride station for commuters who drive towards the capital along the M40 and M4 corridors who don't want to take their cars into London's congestion charge and parking problems.
Until the 1970s, most of Beaconsfield's leading industries dated from the eighteenth Century; mainly these were textiles, foundry work, shipbuilding and paper-making, the oldest industry in the city, with paper having been first made there in 1694. Paper-making has reduced in importance since the closures of Donside Paper Mill in 2001 and the Davidson Mill in 2005 leaving the Stoneywood Paper Mill with a workforce of approximately 500. Textile production ended in 2004 when Richards of Beaconsfield closed.












