Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy
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The Quorum, Alec Issigonis Wy., Oxford Business Park
Oxford, eng OX4 2JZ - (186) 568-5008
Hours
Chamber Rating
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Anon amous123
Critical: Punctuality, Quality, Responsiveness, Value
Jun 30th, 2019 -
Fiona Macleod
do not go near this firm, we have no usable heating, leaks everywhere and they have told us they are in liquidation
Apr 24th, 2018 -
Manuel Blanco Garcia
This builder is being sued for fraud. John Bromley repeatedly misled us requesting advanced payments for material that was never delivered on site. We are aware of other affected parties to which Bromley ows significant amounts of money. If you have also been affected, please get in touch with the police
Jan 21st, 2018 -
Prime User
Awful! Didn't complete the work but demanded more money above contract price. Threatening behaviour! We too have commenced legal action. Save yourself the pain and look elsewhere!
Nov 6th, 2017 -
Erik Kowal
_DO NOT REPEAT OUR MISTAKE_ We hired this company in September 2015 to add a kitchen extension, convert a garage to a dining room, enclose a porch and dig foundations for a garden shed (which would accommodate the contents of the garage). Their salesman Simon lied through his teeth about all the most significant aspects of the job. He promised the company would treat each part of the house separately to minimize disruption (because it would still be occupied during the works). We ended up living in the middle of a building site that occupied the entire ground floor. He promised timely completion. The scheduled three months of works turned into six before the job was finished. He said there would be two project managers overseeing the job. What he omitted to mention was that those two project managers were also overseeing a total of 40 sites simultaneously. My then 78-year-old mother and I ended up _de facto_ having to manage the project day-to-day (except when the appointed project managers appeared from time to time), but without the benefit of possessing detailed knowledge of construction techniques or the authority to hire and fire the subcontractors or schedule the works. The subcontracted tradesmen put on the various jobs varied wildly in terms of their degree of competence. Some of them did not turn up when they were supposed to, leading to problems when they either got in the way of other tradesmen or caused the latter to have to delay their own inputs. The Polish tradesmen hired to attach plasterboard to the former garage walls covered over the electrical outlets completely, despite it being impossible for them to have overlooked the presence of the outlets. They also installed a ceiling in the porch at the wrong height. Both these jobs therefore had to be redone. Some of the electricians were not fully qualified, and made a mess of the wiring in the kitchen that also had to be partially redone. The carpenters installed pull handles on the wrong side of the folding doors separating the dining room from the living room. The quality of their finishing also left something to be desired. The labourers who dug the foundations for the rear extension dug them three feet short of the specified length, making it necessary to reduce the size of the conservatory attached to the kitchen extension by a corresponding amount. They also took an inordinate amount of time over the digging and subjected the entire neighbourhood to the racket of drum-and-bass from their ghettoblaster. The labourers and the plasterboard installers were surly, brusque and unpleasant to deal with. If we hadn't complained about the jobs that were done poorly or not according to specification, the project managers would happily have overlooked the deficiencies; no procedure existed for systematically checking and ensuring the quality of the work done that we could detect. In practice, Bromley & Gaines's quality control system was one that depended on complaints from customers and rectifications being carried out in response, which was frustrating, time-consuming, and left us having to supervise . The only tradesmen who did their jobs well were the plumber, the plasterer and the bricklayer (though the bricklayer added to the time slippage by failing to turn up when he was supposed to). The project managers were half-competent, which I put down mostly to them being stretched so thin, having 39 other sites to manage as well though it's possible that I'm being too charitable. They tended to treat my mother like an idiot because she is old, female, and hard of hearing. John Bromley, the owner of the company, who also visited the site from time to time, was pretty grudging when we asked him to sort out some of the problems that came up. We made a terrible mistake in not insisting on a performance clause for time overruns, or checking out the company's credentials more thoroughly. Overall, we considered Bromley and Gaines to be a shambolic operation that grossly overpromised and grossly under-delivered. Don't say you haven't been warned. Services: Drywall installation, Furniture assembly, New construction services, Remodeling
Mar 27th, 2021
Contact Info
- (186) 568-5008
Questions & Answers
Q What is the phone number for Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy?
A The phone number for Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy is: (186) 568-5008.
Q Where is Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy located?
A Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy is located at The Quorum, Alec Issigonis Wy., Oxford Business Park, Oxford, eng OX4 2JZ
Q What days are Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy open?
A Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy is open:
Friday: 7:00 AM - 7:00 AM
Saturday: 7:00 AM - 7:00 AM
Sunday: Closed
Monday: 7:00 AM - 9:00 PM
Tuesday: 7:00 AM - 9:00 PM
Wednesday: 7:00 AM - 7:00 AM
Thursday: 7:00 AM - 7:00 AM
Q How is Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy rated?
A Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy has a 2.4 Star Rating from 8 reviewers.
Hours
Ratings and Reviews
Pulsed Electromagnetic Therapy
Overall Rating
Overall Rating
( 8 Reviews )Anon amous123 on Google
Critical: Punctuality, Quality, Responsiveness, Value
Fiona Macleod on Google
do not go near this firm, we have no usable heating, leaks everywhere and they have told us they are in liquidation
Manuel Blanco Garcia on Google
This builder is being sued for fraud. John Bromley repeatedly misled us requesting advanced payments for material that was never delivered on site. We are aware of other affected parties to which Bromley ows significant amounts of money. If you have also been affected, please get in touch with the police
Prime User on Google
Awful! Didn't complete the work but demanded more money above contract price. Threatening behaviour! We too have commenced legal action. Save yourself the pain and look elsewhere!
Erik Kowal on Google
_DO NOT REPEAT OUR MISTAKE_
We hired this company in September 2015 to add a kitchen extension, convert a garage to a dining room, enclose a porch and dig foundations for a garden shed (which would accommodate the contents of the garage). Their salesman Simon lied through his teeth about all the most significant aspects of the job.
He promised the company would treat each part of the house separately to minimize disruption (because it would still be occupied during the works). We ended up living in the middle of a building site that occupied the entire ground floor.
He promised timely completion. The scheduled three months of works turned into six before the job was finished.
He said there would be two project managers overseeing the job. What he omitted to mention was that those two project managers were also overseeing a total of 40 sites simultaneously. My then 78-year-old mother and I ended up _de facto_ having to manage the project day-to-day (except when the appointed project managers appeared from time to time), but without the benefit of possessing detailed knowledge of construction techniques or the authority to hire and fire the subcontractors or schedule the works.
The subcontracted tradesmen put on the various jobs varied wildly in terms of their degree of competence.
Some of them did not turn up when they were supposed to, leading to problems when they either got in the way of other tradesmen or caused the latter to have to delay their own inputs. The Polish tradesmen hired to attach plasterboard to the former garage walls covered over the electrical outlets completely, despite it being impossible for them to have overlooked the presence of the outlets. They also installed a ceiling in the porch at the wrong height. Both these jobs therefore had to be redone. Some of the electricians were not fully qualified, and made a mess of the wiring in the kitchen that also had to be partially redone. The carpenters installed pull handles on the wrong side of the folding doors separating the dining room from the living room. The quality of their finishing also left something to be desired. The labourers who dug the foundations for the rear extension dug them three feet short of the specified length, making it necessary to reduce the size of the conservatory attached to the kitchen extension by a corresponding amount. They also took an inordinate amount of time over the digging and subjected the entire neighbourhood to the racket of drum-and-bass from their ghettoblaster. The labourers and the plasterboard installers were surly, brusque and unpleasant to deal with.
If we hadn't complained about the jobs that were done poorly or not according to specification, the project managers would happily have overlooked the deficiencies; no procedure existed for systematically checking and ensuring the quality of the work done that we could detect. In practice, Bromley & Gaines's quality control system was one that depended on complaints from customers and rectifications being carried out in response, which was frustrating, time-consuming, and left us having to supervise .
The only tradesmen who did their jobs well were the plumber, the plasterer and the bricklayer (though the bricklayer added to the time slippage by failing to turn up when he was supposed to). The project managers were half-competent, which I put down mostly to them being stretched so thin, having 39 other sites to manage as well though it's possible that I'm being too charitable. They tended to treat my mother like an idiot because she is old, female, and hard of hearing. John Bromley, the owner of the company, who also visited the site from time to time, was pretty grudging when we asked him to sort out some of the problems that came up. We made a terrible mistake in not insisting on a performance clause for time overruns, or checking out the company's credentials more thoroughly.
Overall, we considered Bromley and Gaines to be a shambolic operation that grossly overpromised and grossly under-delivered.
Don't say you haven't been warned. Services: Drywall installation, Furniture assembly, New construction services, Remodeling