Smart Move Removals provide packing services in Alwoodley and the surrounding West Yorkshire area. The A61 Harrogate Road is the main artery through Alwoodley, running south into Chapel Allerton and Leeds city centre and north towards Harewood and Harrogate. King Lane and Wigton Lane feed the deeper residential streets; both narrow in places and reward a planned loading position rather than an oversized vehicle guessing on arrival.
Full-house packing, fragile-only packing and export wrap by trained crews using our own materials. Save time, protect valuables, move with less stress.
What's included
- Full pack, part pack or fragile-only options
- Double-wall cartons, bubble wrap and tissue supplied
- Antiques, glass and art crated to export standard
- Unpacking and debris removal available
About Alwoodley
One of North Leeds' most established LS17 suburbs, set between Alwoodley Golf Club, Sandmoor Golf Club and the open ground of Eccup Reservoir. Alwoodley is defined by wide, tree-lined avenues off King Lane and Wigton Lane, generous detached houses on King Lane and The Avenue, mid-century family homes around Alwoodley Lane and newer executive properties towards Moor Allerton. The area draws families relocating for space, mature gardens and the short run out to Leeds Bradford Airport, along with downsizers moving into apartment blocks close to Moor Allerton Centre.
- Population
- 16,000
- Avg house price
- £520,000
- Nearest airport
- Leeds Bradford Airport (4mi)
- Nearest hospital
- Leeds General Infirmary (5mi)
- Nearest beach
- Bridlington (65mi)
- Parks & green space
- Eccup Reservoir, Alwoodley Playing Fields, The Hollies (Weetwood), Golden Acre Park
- Alwoodley Golf Club, designed by Dr Alister MacKenzie (later of Augusta National), opened in 1907 and remains one of the top-ranked heathland courses in England.
- Eccup Reservoir, on Alwoodley's northern edge, supplies drinking water to much of Leeds and is a designated Site of Special Scientific Interest for its wintering wildfowl.
- The suburb's name is Old English in origin, recorded in the Domesday Book as 'Aluuoldelei' — the woodland clearing of a man called Æthelwald.
7-day forecast — Alwoodley
Data: Open-Meteo
