Carpet Cleaning in Camberwell, London

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Our unique method of Camberwell carpet cleaning allows your carpet to dry faster after the cleaning process. Our staff can take out many of the tough spots and stubborn stains the other cleaners leave behind. Our products work very well. They are environmentally friendly and safe for your children and pets.
We always dry and groom each fiber giving your carpet that new look and clean feel.
Our professional carpet care technicians are specially trained to assure our customers the highest quality standards in the Camberwell carpet cleaning industry. Our industrial equipment steam cleaning process will effectively remove soil from the bottom of your carpet fibers, where dirt filters and allergens settle. The entire teams of technicians are honest non-commissioned professionals that give you the best Camberwell carpet cleaning service, to keep you r carpets and upholstery looking clean year around.
Covered postcodes: SE5
Information about Camberwell
Camberwell is a district of London in the London Borough of Southwark. It is an inner-city district located 2.7 miles (4.3 km) south east of Charing Cross. Its western edge borders the London Borough of Lambeth. The area is a mixture of relatively well preserved Georgian housing and cheaper housing, including a number of tower blocks. Camberwell Grove and Grove Lane have some of London's most elegant and well preserved Georgian houses. The Salvation Army's William Booth Memorial Training College, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, was completed in 1932: it towers over South London from Denmark Hill. It has a similar monumental impressiveness to Gilbert Scott's other local buildings, Battersea Power Station and the Tate Modern, although its simplicity is partly the result of repeated budget cuts during its construction: much more detail, including carved Gothic stonework surrounding the windows, was originally planned.
The name Camberwell probably derives from the old English Cumberwell or Comberwell. i.e. British well, and springs and wells are known to have existed on the southern slope up Denmark Hill, especially around Grove Park. It was already a substantial settlement with a church when mentioned in the Domesday Book. Up to the mid-nineteenth century, Camberwell was visited by Londoners for its rural tranqullity and the reputed healing properties of its mineral springs. The Camberwell Beauty butterfly was identified on Coldharbour Lane in 1748 but is now rare in Britain. Like much of inner South London, Camberwell was transformed by the arrival of the railways in the 1860s. From 1899 to 1965 Camberwell was part of the Metropolitan Borough of Camberwell.
The crossroads at the centre of Camberwell is the site of Camberwell Green, a very small area of common land which was once a traditional village green on which was held an annual fair of ancient origin which rivaled that of Greenwich. The green was once a peacful place, but now it is unfortunately impossible to ignore the noise of the passing traffic. However, a very extensive range of bus routes have stops at Camberwell Green (see the link to the bus spider map below for details).
The local ethnic mix includes a large proportion of people of Caribbean and African descent, a Greek Cypriot community, and number of immigrants of Middle Eastern origin. The area is popular with students, as it is home to the Camberwell College of Arts (part of the University of the Arts London - formerly the London Institute) on Peckham Road. Kings College (part of the University of London) also has a hall of residence (King's College Hall) on nearby Denmark Hill.
Camberwell has one of London's large teaching hospitals, King's College Hospital. The associated medical school is the (recently merged) Guys Kings and St Thomas (GKT) School of Medicine. The Maudsley Hospital, a renowned psychiatric hospital which is an international leader in developing specialist training in psychiatry, and its academic partner, the equally distinguished Institute of Psychiatry, are also close to Denmark Hill station.
Past and current residents include Joseph Chamberlain, Robert Browning, John Ruskin, Michael Caine, Emma Thompson, Kenneth Branagh and Nicholas Serota. Felix Mendelssohn stayed with relatives in 1842 and wrote a piano piece called 'Camberwell Green', whose popularity increased after it was renamed the 'Spring Song'. W. S. Gilbert also made ironic mention of it in the comic opera, Trial by Jury.
Source: WikiPedia