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Anonymous Posted on Oct 15, 2014

POstal code for 30 Oregon Street, London, ONtario

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  • Posted on Dec 16, 2014
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30 OREGON RD
LONDON ON N5Z 4B9

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Postal code for 40 Boteler St.Ottawa Ontario

There are multiple units at this address. The postal code for unit 101 is:
101-40 BOTELER ST
OTTAWA ON K1N 9C8
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What is the postal code for london

For London, England:
E, EC, N, NW, SE, SW, W, WC, BR, CM, CR, DA, EN, HA, IG, KT, RM, SM, TN, TW, UB, WD

For London, Ontario, Canada: N5V to N6P

For London, Kentucky, USA: 40741-40745

For London, Ohio, USA: 43140

If you mean some other London, please specify.
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Looking for postal code for Hunt Club Drive, London, Ontario

The postal code for 154 Hunt Club Drive is N6H 3Y8, 1 Hunt Club Drive is N6H 3Y8, 240 Hunt Club Drive is N6H 4J6 - depending on the address the postal code changes. Via maps.google.com. Alex
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Postalcode london

If you're asking about London, Ontario, see the Canada Post "find a postal code" web-site:

http://www.canadapost.ca/cpotools/apps/fpc/personal/findByCity?execution=e1s1

and enter information about "London".

Or, check-out the web-site for the "London 2012 Olympic Games":

http://www.London2010.com

for postal-codes for that "London".
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What is the zip code of london?

London postal districts are correctly prefixed with the post town 'LONDON'.

London postal district | London East Central
EC1 Head District | EC2 Bishopsgate | EC3 Fenchurch Street | EC4 Fleet Street

London postal district | London West Central
WC1 Head District | WC2 Strand

London postal district | London North
N1 Head District | N2 East Finchley | N3 Finchley | N4 Finsbury Park | N5 Highbury | N6 Highgate

N7 Holloway | N8 Hornsey | N9 Lower Edmonton | N10 Muswell Hill | N11 New Southgate | N12 North Finchley

N13 Palmers Green | N14 Southgate | N15 South Tottenham | N16 Stoke Newington | N17 Tottenham

N18 Upper Edmonton | N19 Upper Holloway | N20 Whetstone | N21 Winchmore Hill | N22 Wood Green

London postal district | London North West
NW1 Head District | NW2 Cricklewood | NW3 Hampstead | NW4 Hendon | NW5 Kentish Town | NW6 Kilburn

NW7 Mill Hill | NW8 St John's Wood | NW9 The Hyde | NW10 Willesden | NW11 Golders Green

London postal district | London East

E1 Head District | E2 Bethnal Green | E3 Bow | E4 Chingford | E5 Clapton | E6 East Ham | E7 Forest Gate | E8 Hackney | E9 Homerton | E10 Leyton | E11 Leytonstone | E12 Manor Park | E13 Plaistow | E14 Poplar | E15 Stratford | E16 Victoria Dock | E17 Walthamstow | E18 Woodford
London postal district | London West
W1 Head District | W2 Paddington | W3 Acton | W4 Chiswick | W5 Ealing

W6 Hammersmith | W7 Hanwell | W8 Kensington | W9 Maida Vale | W10 North Kensington

W11 Notting Hill | W12 Shepherds Bush | W13 West Ealing | W14 West Kensington

London postal district | London South East
SE1 Head District | SE2 Abbey Wood | SE3 Blackheath | SE4 Brockley | SE5 Camberwell | SE6 Catford | SE7 Charlton

SE8 Deptford | SE9 Eltham | SE10 Greenwich | SE11 Kennington | SE12 Lee | SE13 Lewisham | SE14 New Cross

SE15 Peckham | SE16 Rotherhithe | SE17 Walworth | SE18 Woolwich | SE19 Upper Norwood | SE20 Anerley

SE21 Dulwich | SE22 East Dulwich | SE23 Forest Hill | SE24 Herne Hill | SE25 South Norwood | SE26 Sydenham

SE27 West Norwood | SE28 Thamesmead

London postal district | London South West
SW1 Head District | SW2 Brixton | SW3 Chelsea | SW4 Clapham | SW5 Earls Court

SW6 Fulham | SW7 South Kensington | SW8 South Lambeth | SW9 Stockwell | SW10 West Brompton

SW11 Battersea | SW12 Balham | SW13 Barnes | SW14 Mortlake | SW15 Putney

SW16 Streatham | SW17 Tooting | SW18 Wandsworth | SW19 Wimbledon | SW20 West Wimbledon
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London zipcode

fOUND THIS IT MAY HELP YOU OUT OK. tHANKS TO AL ON yAHOO FOR THIS ANSWER. ************************************************************************************** I live in London W11 2BQ. As no other English city has codes starting with a W, you don't need to write "London". Writing "W11 2BQ" tells the Post Office it is in London. It is implicit.

We call that a postcode and it defines my street unambiguously, A code indicates on average 14 properties (and the various flats within them)

The structure of a London postcode is

(a) a point of the compass (no S and no NE)

(W N E SW NW SE and WC = West Central, EC = East Central)

(b) a district within that point of the compass - there can be between 10 and 30 districts per point of the compass (but less for
WC and EC)

Thus W11 = Notting Hill south of the overhead motorway, W10 = Notting Hill north of the overhead motorway. W2 = Paddington, W6 = Hammersmith,

These postal districts have existed since the mid 19th Century. What turns them into a postcode is the more recent addition of ...

(c) a digit (0-9) and 2 letters, Permissible letters are ABD EFG HJL NPQ RST UWX YZ (excluding CIK MOV), These could give you 10 x 20 x 20 (= 4,000) possibilities,

These define which street we are talking about,

The system establishing postcodes throughout the UK, which involved adding on street codes to the existing London postal districts in which they are located, was gradually introduced nearly 50 years ago in the UK, under the advertising slogan "You are not properly addressed without it!".

The first two parts of the London postcode are collectively known as the outward part of the code (they get the letter to the right sorting office) and the third part knwn as the inward part of the code, as they tell the sorting office into which postbag of which walk the letter should then be placed.

Wikipedia says ...

A postal code (known in various countries as a post code, postcode, or ZIP code) is a series of letters and/or digits appended to a postal address for the purpose of sorting mail.

Germany was the world's first country to introduce a postal code system in 1941. The United Kingdom followed in 1959 and the United States in 1963.

The majority of the world's national postal services have postal code systems. A few do not: for example, Ireland, although a national postal code system will be introduced in 2008. Hong Kong and Panama do not have postal codes.

American zip codes are 5 digits. i.e. numbers only. Finland too. In Finland the first two digits show the postal area and the last three digits represent the particular post office in the area. Corporations receiving large amounts of mail may have their own postal code. The special postal code 99999 is Korvatunturi, the place were Santa Claus (or Joulupukki in Finnish) is said to live.

Most postal codes are numeric. The few countries using alphanumeric postal code systems (with letters and digits) are: Argentina. Bermuda, Brunei, Canada, Jamaica, Malta, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, Venezuela

But the UK is wavering.

UK postcodes are alphanumeric and between six and eight characters in length (including a single space character used to separate the outward and inward parts of the code). For example the post code for the House of Commons is SW1A 0AA. These codes were introduced by the Royal Mail over a fifteen year period from 1959 to 1974.

However, as the format of the codes does not achieve its objective of primarily identifying the main sorting office and sub-office they have been supplemented by a newer system of five digit codes called Mailsort. Mail users who can deliver mail to the post office sorted by mailsort code receive discounts, whilst delivery by postcode does not provide any such financial incentive.

LONDON

In the London area postcodes are slightly different, being based on the old system of 163 London postal districts and predating by many years the introduction of postcodes in the 1960s:

In central London, WC and EC (West Central and East Central)

In the rest of London, N, NW, SW, SE, W and E.

The London postal districts rarely coincide with the boundaries of the London boroughs (even the former, smaller metropolitan boroughs). The numbering system appears arbitrary on the map: for example, NW1 is close to central London, but NW2 is a long way out. This is because (after starting with 1 for the area containing the main sorting office) they were numbered alphabetically by the name of the main sorting office.

The area covered by the London postal districts was somewhat larger than the County of London, and included parts of Kent, Essex, Surrey, Middlesex and Hertfordshire. In 1965 the creation of Greater London caused this situation to be reversed as the boundaries of Greater London went far beyond the existing London postal districts.

Those places not covered by the existing districts received postcodes as part of the national coding plan, so the postcode areas of "EN" Enfield, "KT" Kingston upon Thames, "HA" Harrow, "UB" Uxbridge", "TW" Twickenham, "SM" Sutton, "CR" Croydon, "DA" Dartford, "BR" Bromley, "RM" Romford and "IG" Ilford cross administrative boundaries and cover parts of neighbouring counties as well as parts of London.

A further complication is that in some of the most central London areas, a further graduation has been necessary to produce enough postcodes, giving codes like EC1A 1AA.

While most postcodes are allocated by administrative convenience, a few are deliberately chosen. For example in Westminster:

SW1A 0AA - House of Commons
SW1A 0PW - House of Lords, Palace of Westminster
SW1A 1AA - Buckingham Palace
SW1A 2AA - 10 Downing Street, Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury
SW1A 2AB - 11 Downing Street, Chancellor of the Exchequer
SW1A 2HQ - HM Treasury

So now you know how to write to the Queen and to Tony Blair! And to write to Santa Claus. the postcode for correctly addressed letters to Santa is SAN TA1.

TRIVIA

Why no NE or S?

There are no London postal districts labelled "NE" or "S". These were in the initial division but were later removed as they were considered unnecessary.

Following a report by Anthony Trollope (1815 – 1882) one of the most successful, prolific and respected English novelists of the Victorian era) in 1866 most of the NE district was transferred to the E sector; the rest was left without a letter designation until the introduction of the IG and RM postcodes almost a century later (though only a part of the area covered by these new codes was in the old NE London district). The S sector was divided between SE and SW in 1868.

The NE and S codes have since been applied to Newcastle Upon Tyne and Sheffield respectively. Both of them major centres of population. Source(s):
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What is zip code for london

London, Ontario or London, England? Both cities use postal codes (ZIP is US-only Zone Improvement Project). Each city, except very small ones, has a large number of postal codes. Check the post office site for the country for which you want the postal codes.

Try http://www.freesearching.com/zip_codes_intl-e.htm fir a a start
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