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GENT

​Gent fire alarm detection systems have been developed to the highest possible standards to deliver the most advanced fire detection and alarm systems available in the market today. Gent by Honeywell is synonymous with quality and innovation in the fire detection and alarm industry.

Britannia Fire & Security are part of the Gent 24 Network of Approved System Integrators operating across Cambridgeshire, East Anglia and the UK. The network is a group of specialist companies who have been selected, trained and approved based on their extensive capabilities and considerable experience in the fire industry.

Britannia are a Gent Elite Systems Integrator and design, install, commission, service and maintain Gent products to the highest standards of workmanship.

As a market leading manufacturer, Gent have a broad range of Analogue Addressable and Conventional fire detection systems. In addition to this they have built up expertise in voice alarm systems and have a range of systems to suit most applications.

From control panels through to manual call points, detectors, bells, door releases and sounders, Britannia can install a wide range of Gent systems scalable for sites of all types and sizes.

​Glossop is a market town in the High Peak, Derbyshire, England, 12 miles (19 km) east of Manchester, 24 miles (39 km) northwest of Sheffield and 32 miles (51 km) north of the county town, Matlock, near Derbyshire's borders with Cheshire, Greater Manchester, South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire. It is between 150 and 300 metres (492 and 984 ft) above mean sea level, and lies just outside the Peak District National Park.

Historically, the name Glossop refers to the small hamlet that gave its name to an ancient parish recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086, and then the manor given by William I of England to William Peverel. A municipal borough was created in 1866, and the unparished urban area within two local government wards.[1] The area now known as Glossop approximates to the villages that used to be called Glossopdale, on the lands of the Duke of Norfolk. Originally a centre of wool processing, Glossop rapidly expanded in the late 18th century when it specialised in the production and printing of calico, a coarse cotton, and became a mill town with many chapels and churches, its fortunes tied to the cotton industry.

Architecturally, the area is dominated by buildings constructed of the local sandstone. There remain two significant former cotton mills and the Dinting railway viaduct. Glossop has transport links to Manchester, making the area popular for commuters.

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