Carpet Cleaning in Blackfriars, London

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We have the aim is to assist our Blackfriars customers in maintaining their carpets in as good a condition as new. In addition to your routine weekly care, you should have your Blackfriars carpets professionally cleaned at least once a year.
Our company employs Blackfriars carpet cleaning specialists and offers the service most suited for your carpet as well as expert stain and odor removal treatment on such stains as.
We always choose the best biodegradable chemicals and shampoos and will not leave cleaning sticky residues, odors or chaffed patches.
Carpets cleaned by our Blackfriars team stay cleaner longer and have a long lasting fresh appearance.
Covered postcodes: EC4
Information about Blackfriars
Blackfriars is an area of central London, which lies in the south-west corner of the City of London. The name Blackfriars was first used in 1342 and derives from the black habits of the Dominican Friars who moved their priory from Holborn to the area between the River Thames and Ludgate Hill in 1276. Edward I gave permission to rebuild London's city wall, which lay between the river and Ludgate Hill, around their area. The site was used for great occasions of state, including meetings of Parliament and the Privy Council, as well as the location for a divorce hearing in 1529 of Catherine of Aragon and Henry VIII. The priory was eventually closed in 1538 during Henry's Dissolution of the monasteries.
Some of the buildings were subsequently leased to a group of entrepeneurs who created the Blackfriars Theatre on the site, not far from Shakespeare's Globe Theatre which sat almost directly across on the other side of the river. In 1632, the Society of Apothecaries (a livery company), acquired the monastery's guesthouse and established their base there. The building was destroyed in the Great Fire of London but the Society rebuilt and Apothecaries Hall is still to be found in Blackfriars today.
The area is now the location of Blackfriars station, and forms the northern bridge-head for both Blackfriars Bridge and Blackfriars Railway Bridge. The Victoria Embankment stretches along the north bank of the river west from Blackfriars to Westminster Bridge.
Source: WikiPedia