Tyres in Bracknell

Tyre Fitting in Bracknell could not be easier. With TyreFitDirect we can supply and fit tyres to nearly all UK mainland destinations either on one of our mobile vans or at one of our depots. So if you are looking for tyre fitting in Bracknell you have just found your local online supplier. We fit tyres on almost all makes, models and derivatives of cars and vans and are available either online or on the phone.

At TyreFitDirect we pride ourselves in offering some of the best deals on the web. Please peruse our site to check out some of our offers. We look forward to fitting tyres for you in Bracknell soon. TyreFitDirect, the Bracknell tyre fitting company of choice.

 

About Bracknell

Bracknell is a town and civil parish in the Borough of Bracknell Forest in Berkshire, England. The town has a population of 77,256 and is twinned with the German city of Leverkusen.

The town is surrounded, on the east and south, by Swinley Woods and Crowthorne Woods. The urban area has absorbed parts of many local outlying areas including Warfield, Winkfield and Binfield, and is itself, along with Binfield, a component of the Greater London Urban Area.

The name Bracknell is first recorded in a Winkfield Boundary Charter of AD 942 as Braccan heal, and may mean “Nook of land belonging to a man called Bracca”, from the Old English Braccan (genitive singular of a personal name) + heal, healh (a corner, nook or secret place). An early form of the town’s name, Brakenhale, still survives as the name of one of its schools. The town covers all of the old village of Easthampstead (though not all of the old parish) and the hamlet of Ramslade.

Bracknell was designated a new town in 1949, in the aftermath of the Second World War. The site was originally a village cum small town in the civil parish of Warfield in the Easthampstead Rural District. Very little of the original Bracknell is left. The location was preferred to White Waltham, which was also considered, because the Bracknell site avoided encroaching on good quality agricultural land. It also had the additional advantage of being on a railway line.