SAVE TIME AND MONEY:
First, you want to make a list of all the household items that you have in your house. Then, decide which of those items you want to take with you to your new place and which household items you are going to take with you, versus which ones you will sell, donate, or leave behind.
Make a list of the packing materials that you will need in order to cover your articles. Make certain that you have all the packing materials that you need before starting the packing process. After doing that, you want to start packing the items that you are certain you will not need to use until after your move to the new location.
Once you've found the first items that you want to pack, look at the item and think what is the best way to protect them? Just remember that the item that you need to cover needs to be in a moving box or wrapped correctly with moving blankets or pads in order to keep your furniture or articles safe during your move. Make sure that that the items that you are going to pack do not contain water, fuel, oil or some other liquid. Clean the item before you pack it.
Some Denver moving companies offer moving services only while others include packing and unpacking service. Remember that packing is always a separate bid from moving.
Providing information as much as possible to the moving company is essential. This will make sure your estimates will be more accurate. Remember, there is extra charge if the moving staffs have to carry your boxes in a longer distance. Inform Denver Movers in advance of any problems they may encounter at the delivery such as road access, parking, and delivery time and if there are any stairs or elevators involved. The cost of your move will depend from such instances.
ABOUT DENVER:
The City and County of Denver is the capital and largest city of the U.S. state of Colorado. It is located on the plains just east of the Rocky Mountains and forms the heart of the Denver-Aurora metropolitan area. The central downtown district is on the east side of the South Platte River, near its confluence with Cherry Creek, approximately fifteen miles from the foothills.
Denver is the county seat of, and shares the same borders with, Denver County — one of the few consolidated city-counties in the United States. According to 2005 Census estimates [1], the city has a population of 557,917 and ranks as the 25th-largest in the United States and the sixth-largest state capital. The population of the Denver-Aurora metropolitan area is about 2,330,146 (2005) According to Demographia, it is the 20th largest metropolitan area in the United States by 2000 population[2] [3]. The city claims to have the tenth largest downtown in the United States [4].
Denver is nicknamed "The Mile-High City" because its official elevation, measured on the fifteenth step of the state capitol building's west side, is one statute mile (5,280 feet or 1,609 meters) above sea level. The city's elevation, as surveyed at Denver International Airport, is 5,431 ft (1,655 m).
Denver has also been known historically as the Queen City of the Plains because of its important role in the agricultural industry of the plains regions along the foothills of the Front Range. Other nicknames that Denver has had include The Rail City, for the city's importance as a North American rail hub, and Capital of the Rocky Mountain Empire, for the city's preeminence in the Rocky Mountain region. Several US Navy ships have been named USS Denver in honor of the city
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