Business and office moves run through every major UK commercial centre. London is the largest catchment — Central London, the City of London, Canary Wharf, Shoreditch, King’s Cross, Soho, Mayfair, Victoria and the wider M25 commuter belt all have dense driver coverage. Specific co-working and serviced-office concentrations across WeWork, Regus, Mindspace, The Office Group, Spaces and Huckletree buildings are routine pickup and drop-off points.
Outside London, Manchester is the next biggest commercial hub — Spinningfields, the Northern Quarter, NOMA, MediaCityUK and Salford Quays all have regular business move bookings. Birmingham covers Colmore Row, the Jewellery Quarter, Digbeth and the Snow Hill business district. Bristol runs through Temple Quay, the Harbourside, Aztec West and the Bristol Business Park. Leeds covers the city centre and Holbeck. Edinburgh runs through New Town, Leith and the Quartermile. Glasgow covers the Merchant City and the Finnieston commercial strip.
Building types covered include co-working spaces, serviced offices, dedicated single-tenant offices, incubators, accelerators, retail units (high-street and shopping-centre), pop-up shops, warehouse conversions, managed workspaces and showrooms. Industrial-estate, business-park and enterprise-zone pickups and drop-offs are part of the regular job mix — Cambridge Science Park, Thames Valley Park, Cobalt Business Park, Manchester Business Park, MediaCity and the various out-of-town business parks all see regular bookings.
Smaller business catchments include Cardiff, Newcastle, Liverpool, Sheffield, Nottingham, Leicester, Coventry, Reading, Cambridge, Oxford, Brighton, Southampton, Portsmouth, Aberdeen and Dundee. Regional fit-out moves between cities — for example a London-based startup expanding into a Manchester satellite office, or a Bristol firm relocating its Cardiff branch — are priced as long-distance bookings using the same route-time model. Same driver, same van, door-to-door.