Carpet Cleaning in Limehouse, London

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Don't haggle up to a higher price by our competitors! Let our professional Limehouse carpet cleaning services satisfy you with the best service at the most reasonable prices in town.
If spots, spills, or dirty, matted traffic paths have made your carpet look less attractive, it's time for us to deep clean your carpets and area rugs.
Our Limehouse carpet cleaning system will provide you with superior results, including: deep cleans and removes soil and spots, lifts and fluffs matted carpet pile, leaves carpet dry and ready to enjoy, with a clean, fresh scent; spots won't come back; no sticky detergent residue to attract new soil; safe to use on all natural and synthetic carpet fibers; recommended by leading carpet manufacturers and fiber producers.
Covered postcodes: E14
Information about Limehouse
Limehouse is a place in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is on the northern bank of the River Thames opposite Cuckold's Point and between Shadwell to the west and the Isle of Dogs to the east.
Geographically, Limehouse is commonly thought to be centred on Narrow Street and the Limehouse Basin. It gives its name to Limehouse Reach, a lengthy section of the Thames which actually runs all the way from Shadwell to Millwall.
St Anne's Limehouse was built by Nicholas Hawksmoor. A pyramid originally planned to be put atop the tower now stands in the graveyard. The church is next door to Limehouse Town Hall. For several years this housed the National Museum of Labour History and included trade union banners and other artefacts including the table that once belonged to Peter Kropotkin, the Russian Anarchist Prince. Now it is the home of the FacultyUnix FreeBSD workshops, Boxing Club and the Space Hijackers. Across the road is the Sailors' Mission, where the Situationist International held its conference in 1960. The building subsequently became a run-down hostel for the homeless which became notorious for its squalor.
Further to the southwest, Narrow Street, Limehouse's historic spine, which runs along the back of the Thames wharves, boasts one of the few surviving early Georgian terraces in London. Next to the terrace is the historic Grapes pub, well-known to Charles Dickens. He featured it in Our Mutual Friend as 'The Six Jolly Fellowship Porters'.
A statue of Clement Attlee in front of the boarded up Limehouse library
Limehouse library has a statue of Clement Attlee, who was Member of Parliament for Limehouse from 1922 and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1945 to 1951.
On January 25, 1981 MPs Shirley Williams, Roy Jenkins, William Rodgers and David Owen made the Limehouse Declaration from Owen's house in Limehouse, which announced the formation of the Council for Social Democracy in opposition to the granting of block votes to the trade unions in the Labour Party to which they had previously belonged. They soon became leading politicians in the Social Democratic Party.
From Sunday May 11 to Sunday June 15, 2003 the Cartographic Congress, a meeting of maps and mapmakers from all corners of cartography took place in Limehouse Town Hall.
Source: WikiPedia