Carpet Cleaning in Sydenham, London

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Our services are the best value for professional carpet and upholstery cleaning company in Sydenham.
So, like any home or office tenant, you're proud of your home and you want it to look and be clean. You want to remove those stains and spots, pesky watermarks, scuffing on your skirting, shoe marks on your wooden flooring, spills on your carpet or even just odd scents about in the house.
We are Sydenham professional carpet cleaners who care about our results.
Our Sydenham specialists are using the latest hot water extraction (steam cleaning) equipment and carpet and upholstery / furniture cleaning products and we have an old-fashioned approach to how the work is done.
Covered postcodes: SE26
Information about Sydenham
Sydenham is a place, for the most part, in the London Borough of Lewisham; though some streets towards Crystal Palace Park and Penge are in the London Borough of Bromley, and some streets off Sydenham Hill are in the London Borough of Southwark. Less than 200 years ago Sydenham was a sleepy hamlet in the Kent countryside. The building of the railway and Crystal Palace transformed Sydenham into a fashionable Victorian town for Londoners to visit. Inevitably both grew and merged to now make Sydenham an integral multi-ethnic part of South East London.
Sydenham, Sepham, Cypenham or Sippenham as it has been known was a heavily wooded area of fine oaks, yew trees and quiet country lanes. There were some cottages on the lane from Northwood (now Norwood) to Southend (now Downham). In 1801 work was started on the Deptford to Croydon canal. This passed through Sydenham and 'The Greyhound' Inn was built where the road passed over the canal. The canal did not prosper long and it was taken over, filled in and converted into a railway.
All changed in 1852 when the Directors of the Railway company had the bright idea of buying and moving The Crystal Palace built by Sir Joseph Paxton for the Great Exhibition in 1851 from Hyde Park to Sydenham. Their idea was to encourage Londoners to take a day out 'in the country' to visit the new enlarged Crystal Palace set in its own pleasure gardens complete with pools, fountains and even a Dinosaur Theme Park. A sort of combination of Disneyland and Jurassic Park!
This would increase traffic on the trains, they could charge for a wide range of entertainments and even benefit from development of a suddenly fashionable area around Lawrie Park and Newlands Park. The houses got progressively smaller towards Lower Sydenham and Bell Green, site of one of London's major gas works. The population grew from 2,800 in 1841 to 4,500 (1851), 10,595 (1861), 20,000 (1871) and around 40,000 by 1900.
In 1871 Sydenham was imortalised in the works of the exiled Camille Pissaro - the most famous of which, a view along Lawrie Park Avenue towards St Bart's Church, now hangs in the National Gallery. The Beast of Sydenham, as of 25 March 2005, is a large, panther-like black animal which has been spotted around the area, and attacked a man.
Nearest places
- Bellingham
- Crystal Palace
- Dulwich
- Forest Hill
- Honor Oak
- Penge
- West Norwood
Source: WikiPedia