Carpet Cleaning in Peckham, London

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Our professional Peckham carpet cleaning agency offers a wide selection of services and brings years of knowledge about carpet and upholstery care. Our customers know the quality of care we offer and our dedication to meeting their needs.
We are a Peckham professional carpet care company. We use truck-mounted steam cleaning to maintain a clean, healthy environment in your house or building. Our staff is one of the most highly trained in Peckham and we handle any sized job, from the smallest to the largest.
Proper maintenance not only keeps everything looking nice, it also helps your overall quality of living. Our Peckham carpet cleaning maintenance reduces the dust and particles that can aggravate asthma and allergies. The end result is beautiful, clean floors and a happier, healthier family and office.
Covered postcodes: SE15
Information about Peckham
Peckham is a place in the London Borough of Southwark. It is located 3.5 miles (5.7 km) south west of Charing Cross, about a mile (1.6 km) east of Camberwell and a mile (1.6 km) west of New Cross. Peckham has never been an administrative district, or a single ecclesiastical parish in its own right, but it developed a strong sense of identity in the nineteenth century when Rye Lane was one of the most important shopping streets in South London, and indeed still is for wigs and yams. It was the setting for the popular sitcom "Only Fools and Horses" throughout the eighties and early nineties, and has not yet shaken off its reputation as the run-down, dangerous area that was depicted in the TV series, although the series was apparently filmed in Acton. Most media coverage of Peckham is in relation to its high crime rate - recent famous cases include the murder of Damilola Taylor in November 2000 and the machine-gunning of eight or nine (contemporary reports vary) people queueing outside Chicago's nightclub in the summer of 2000.
Peckham is an area of great diversity: gang-related shootings, muggings and burglary characterise one picture whilst another emphasises the high population of artists and professionals. The Bellenden area in the south west is busy with cafés, wine bars, niche shops and artists' studios. There is also clear cultural diversity: the offspring of generations of Londoners mix with members of communities from China, the Caribbean, India, Ireland, Nigeria and Turkey.
The European Union has invested heavily in the regeneration of the area; partly funding the futuristic, award-winning Peckham Library, a new town square and swathes of new housing to replace the North Peckham Estate. Throughout the area state funding is being provided to improve the housing stock and renovate the streets. This includes funding for public arts projects like the Tom Phillips mosaics on the wall of the Peckham Experiment restaurant. The main shopping street is Rye Lane, and the large Peckham Rye Park is nearby. The oldest surviving building in Peckham is 2 Wood's Road, built in 1690.
In the 1930s George Scott Williamson and Innes Pearse opened the Pioneer Health Centre in Queens Road. They planned to conduct a large experiment into the effect of environment on health. 'The Peckham Experiment' recruited 950 families at one shilling a week. The members joined something like a modern sports club with facilities for physical exercise, games, workshops and socialising with no mandatory programme. The centre moved into a purpose built modernist building by the architect Sir Owen Williams in 1935.
North Peckham was heavily redeveloped in the 1960s with concrete housing characterised by high walkways. This became a sink estate by the 1980s with a marked rise in gun crime and illegal drug dealing. At the end of the 1990s a drastic plan was enacted to demolish the entire estate and replace it with low-rise dwellings and eliminate the no-go area that had become such a high-profile embarrassment. Less dramatic changes have also flowed from extensive investment in the housing and streets throughout Peckham.
In the early 1990s Peckham was a nexus of the underground music culture because of a large squat in the disused DHSS building near Peckham High Street. The squatters adopted the name Dole House Crew and held impromptu parties on the ground floor of the building whilst living on the upper floor.
Source: WikiPedia