Carpet Cleaning in Wood Green, London

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- industrial carpet cleaning services in Wood Green
- best prices for domestic carpet cleaning services in Wood Green
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We have the aim is to assist our Wood Green customers in maintaining their carpets in as good a condition as new. In addition to your routine weekly care, you should have your Wood Green carpets professionally cleaned at least once a year.
Our company employs Wood Green carpet cleaning specialists and offers the service most suited for your carpet as well as expert stain and odor removal treatment on such stains as.
We always choose the best biodegradable chemicals and shampoos and will not leave cleaning sticky residues, odors or chaffed patches.
Carpets cleaned by our Wood Green team stay cleaner longer and have a long lasting fresh appearance.
Covered postcodes: N22
Information about Wood Green
Wood Green - or "the Green" as it is known to some of its residents - is a place in the London Borough of Haringey. It is a suburban development situated 6.1 miles (9.8 km) north of Charing Cross. In the latter half of the 19th century and before urbanisation it was part of Tottenham and covered by woodland called Tottenham Wood, hence the name of the area, Tottenham Wood Green. Most of Wood Green is in the Hornsey and Wood Green parliamentary constituency.
In 1894 Wood Green was created as an urban district, and later a municipal borough, of Middlesex. In 1965, under the London Government Act 1963, the Municipal Borough of Wood Green was abolished and its area merged with that of the Municipal Borough of Tottenham and the Municipal Borough of Hornsey to form the present-day London Borough of Haringey. It is an important local retail hub, with two cinemas, bars and a shopping centre - Shopping City - close to the tube station. The High Street, the main shopping spine, stretches from the Wood Green tube station to the next stop on the Piccadilly Line, Turnpike Lane. Wood Green Crown Court is a short distance along Lordship Lane.
Historically, Wood Green played a leading role in the development of both public service and commercial television in the UK. On 2 November 1936, the BBC opened its TV service at Alexandra Palace (a.k.a. Ally Pally) and in 1955 with the opening of Lew Grade's London weekend franchise Associated Television (ATV), the Wood Green Empire in Lymington Avenue was home to variety programmes on Independent Television (ITV), one of which was the 'Arthur Haynes Show', starring the host himself and his straight man Nicholas Parsons. Sadly, the Wood Green Empire no longer exists (it has been replaced by a shopping precinct) and all that is left of the halcyon days of BBC TV in Wood Green, is the familiar TV mast on Alexandra Palace. The ATV operations moved to Elstree and Borehamwood (now BBC studios) and the BBC News department, which was the only unit remaining at Ally Pally after BBC TV Centre was opened in the 1950's, moved to White City, west London in the early 1970's. Ally Pally was used for the production of joint BBC/Open University (OU) programmes for a while, but all OU programmes are now produced in Milton Keynes where the OU's headquarters are located.
On January 7, 2003, British police announced details of the discovery of traces of the toxin ricin in a flat in Palmers Green near Wood Green but often mistakenly attributed in the media as being located in Wood Green in the wake of the arrest of 6 terrorist suspects. A massive search for their accomplices followed. However it was later revealed more accurate tests showed that no ricin was in fact present in the flat, see Ricin-related arrests in Britain.
Source: WikiPedia