Get quality tree removal in Radnor with V. Serrano’s Landscaping. We provide safe and organized service every time.
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At V. Serrano’s Landscaping, we specialize in tree services across Delaware County. Our arborist team focuses on maintaining your property’s beauty and safety. With years of managing storm damage and offering emergency tree services, we are a trustworthy partner for all your landscaping maintenance needs. Contact us at 215-834-2327 to learn more about our solutions.
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Tree removal is vital for maintaining the safety and aesthetics of your property. V. Serrano’s Landscaping serves Radnor, PA, and surrounding areas in Delaware County, bringing knowledge and professionalism to every project. From storm damage to routine landscaping maintenance, our services preserve the health of your landscape while improving its beauty. Call us today at 215-834-2327 to schedule your consultation.
The community of Radnor was founded in 1686 at the Radnor Friends Meetinghouse, which was located on Conestoga Road, a bypass of Lancaster Avenue connecting Devon and Bryn Mawr. During the Revolutionary War, the meetinghouse was used as an outpost for General George Washington’s Continental Army. In 1872, the Pennsylvania Railroad’s Main Line was constructed, which briefly passed through the southern section of Radnor. A station serving the town was established at King of Prussia Road, approximately one mile south of the Meetinghouse.
For much of its history, Radnor was primarily a farming community, and relatively undeveloped, even past World War II. Its town center, around the Meetinghouse, remained quaint and secluded from denser development seen in the nearby communities of Wayne and Bryn Mawr. However, starting in the 1980s, Radnor started to see great residential and commercial development, mostly stemming from suburban development for Philadelphia. Additionally, office parks began to spring up in the southern portion of the community, by the train station, primarily due to safety concerns in Center City. Some big name firms, such as Lincoln National Corporation, moved their headquarters from Center City to Radnor, and currently the community is best known for its financial hub around the train station.
In the 1970s, highway planners envisioned the Blue Route expressway passing through Radnor, approximately .3 mile east of the Meetinghouse. The project faced severe backlash from the Radnor community, as what was initially known as a quiet, rural feeling town would have a lot more noise. Despite attempts to quell the project, the community eventually lost, and the Blue Route opened in the 1990s on the initial alignment.
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