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Category — removals to Adelaide

removals to Adelaide, shipping to adelaide, moving company to Adelaide Australia

Hunts Removals C/O Removals to Australia.com has successfully carried out hundreds of families moving to Adelaide, we work very closely with our detination partner removalist  in Adelaide Australia, who will assist you with all your removal & customs requirements in adelaide.

Our team at Removals to Australia.com has come together just to give you a little information on Adelaide and any latest housing news you should be aware of.

Adelaide is really nice – very quite and a pretty part of Australia. The Adelaide hills are also very lovely and with the new freeway it doesnt take very long at all to get to the city. Stirling, Hahndorf as well as Mount Barker are all gorgeous places to live….lovely trees everywhere. Adelaide has very affordable housing compared to the eastern states.

The city centre is planned as a grid system which is surrounded by green parklands thus earning it the name of city in a park. The CBD (or Central Business District) is home to an array of entertainment and facilities including the bustling Rundle Mall, home of over 600 shops and those infamous silver balls. You will also find numerous museums, galleries, Adelaide Zoo and Elder Park where you can relax on the edges of the River Torrens along with much more. Adelaide’s Central Market is a great place to spend the day soaking up the atmosphere, located in the city centre next to China Town.

If you are moving to Adelaide it has recently been placed on water restrictions ( currently for Adelaide it is level 3a water restrictions ) and they have been asked to have water saving shower heads and to save every drop of water where possible – more dishes less to wash up and 4 minute showers per person in each household the water tanks are for rain water for rain water collection and our government offers a rebate / grant for those making the choice and decision of putting in a water tank (check to see if your new house has a rain water tank fitted) in order to use THAT water for garden and showers and drinking water etc rather than from the dams as adelaide are now in the process of building a couple of desalinisation building’s in order to solve the water shortage problem.

Does your new house have a reverse cycle air conditioning? These are electric heating systems which also provide refrigerative cooling. How does reverse cycle air conditioning work? Most electric heaters create heat directly, using elements which heat up when an electric current passes through them. These ‘direct element’ heaters include portable heaters, panel convectors and off-peak storage heaters. They have a maximum efficiency of 100%, when all the electricity is converted to heat and delivered to the room. Reverse cycle air conditioning extracts heat from the outside air, even on mid-winter nights, and transfers it inside. A refrigerant is passed through an external coil, absorbing heat from the outside air.

This refrigerant is then pumped through a compressor into a fan coil unit (or ‘condenser’) inside the home, releasing its heat into the room. Up to three or more units of heat can be transferred for every unit of electricity used to run reverse cycle air conditioning. Therefore, running costs can be as low as one-third of those for direct element heaters. By reversing the flow of this refrigerant, reverse cycle air conditioners also provide efficient refrigerative cooling in summer. in short term . . another way of saving and conserving energy or going ” GREEN ” as they say and or environmentally friendly .

With the OZONE Hole right above the Lower half Of Australia and are more subject to 2nd / 3rd degree sunburn in a shorter space of time and clothes fade faster in the sun when hung out on the clothes line to dry.

Please ring our office for further information and advice on Tel: 0800 387 280 or contact us via email onsales@removalstoaustralia.com

or you can fill out our on-line estimation form for a price on your removals to Australia

July 18, 2011   No Comments