Carpet Cleaning in Moorgate, London

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Our agency provides professional Moorgate carpet cleaning services that ensure your home and office are not only clean, but also healthy environments for work and play.
We offer the best truck mounted and portable steam carpet cleaning services in the Moorgate industry.
We provide our technicians the opportunity to gain more knowledge and experience by offering training classes to them current on the latest procedures, techniques, and cleaning supplies available. All of this guarantees that you are getting a highly qualified Moorgate carpet cleaning technician.
Our full-time technicians are also certified water damage restoration specialists. Your carpets will always look their best when they have our regular professional carpet cleaning treatment.
Our cleaning materials leave no sticky residue or unpleasant odors.
Covered postcodes: EC2
Information about Moorgate
Moorgate was one of the minor gates of the old London Wall. Though the gate itself was demolished in 1761, the name survives as a major street in the heart of the City of London. The street connects the city to Islington, and was constructed around 1846 for the formation of new approaches to London Bridge.
The name "Moorgate" derives from the surrounding area of Moorfields, which was one of the last pieces of open land in the city. Today this region is a financial centre, and is home to several of the United Kingdom's major investment and commercial banks. The street also showcases historic and contemporary office buildings, including the Guildhall and the Moorhouse.
The Moorgate station on the London Underground is widely remembered for the Moorgate tube crash of 1975. In the incident, a train terminating at the station failed to stop and crashed into a brick wall, and 43 people were killed. This resulted in systems being installed on the Underground which automatically stop trains at dead-ends, which have become known as Moorgate control.
The contemporary dual carriage street of Moorgate runs north from Princes Street and Lothbury near the location of the Bank of England, past London Wall and the location of the old gate, and then continues north. It is located inside the London EC2 postal district. After leaving the City of London in the direction of the Borough of Islington, the street is known as Finsbury Pavement, which at one time was known as Moor Fields Pavement, and then City Road. The street was constructed around 1846 as one of the new approaches to London Bridge. While the street was formally known as "Moorgate Street", the street part of the name eventually fell out of use.
The street is lined with offices of several major commercial banks and investment banks. A new commercial development on Moorgate, known as Moorhouse, is scheduled to open in 2005. The building is located at the corner of Moorgate and London Wall, and was designed by Foster and Partners. The building has 28,000 m² of office space in 19 storeys, and is built in the location of a smaller office building built in the 1960s known as Moor House. The building incorporates part of Crossrail's new station and ticket hall serving Liverpool Street and Moorgate.
There is a campus of the London Metropolitan University, formerly a part of the London Guildhall University, on Moorgate. The campus houses its business school, a library, and other administrative facilities. There is a small side street to the east off of Moorgate, known as Moorgate Place. It now connects to another side street known as Swan Alley, in turn connecting to Moorgate. The side street is the location of the Chartered Accountants' Hall, home of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales,
The Guildhall is connected to Moorgate station via Bassishaw Highwalk. The Guildhall is the home of the Corporation of London and the centre of City government since the Middle Ages. Adjacent and internally connected to the Guildhall is the Guildhall Art Gallery, which houses the art collection of the City of London. It occupies a stone building in a semi-Gothic style which was completed in 1999 to replace an earlier building destroyed in 1941.
The London branch of the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi is located at 12-15 Finsbury Circus. BP's headquarters were previously at 1 Finsbury Circus (it is now at 1 St. James' Square). Moorgate is also the birthplace of John Keats, one of the principal poets in the English Romantic movement. Keats was born in 1795 in the Swan and Hoop Inn at 199 Moorgate, where his father was an ostler. The pub is now called "The John Keats at Moorgate", having previously been known as "The Moorgate Coffee House" and "The Moorgate", only a few yards from Moorgate station.
Source: WikiPedia