Rug Cleaning East Central London

Over time rugs tend to accumulate dust and staining and so become a nesting ground for bacteria and dust mites. If you keep your rugs clean on a regular basis, you will manage to reduce or eliminate many potential risks for your health. We at Carpet Cleaning Group offer a comprehensive rug cleaning service. We use only the latest rug cleaning machines and equipments, which ensure the removal of any dust, dirt or bacteria. If your rug is Oriental or Persian, you should be calm that your investment remains safe in our hands.

Because only properly trained professionals are allowed to handle these beautiful and costly investments. Our rug experts begin the cleaning process by identifying the fibers and dyes. So they are sure that the cleaning method applied, is the very best for your product. No matter what kind of Oriental or area rug you own, you can be assured that our technicians will know just how to care for it and return it to you in immaculate condition. You can also ask about our Scotchgard to protect your valuable rugs against permanent staining on the contacts below.

The regions in East Central London where you can find us are:

Barbican Estate, Aldgate, Leadenhall, Hatton Garden, Blackfriars, Billinsgate, Lombard Street, Moorgate, Tower Hill, Leicester Square, Holborn, St Luke’s, Bunhill Fields, Finsbury, Finsbury Estate, Monument, St Pauls, Mansion House, Fenchurch Street, Cannon Street, Shoreditch, Broadgate, Tower Hill, Clerkenwell, Temple, Charring Cross, Kings Cross, Liverpool Street, Aldwych, Fleet Street, Farringdon.

Leicester Square is a lies within an area bound by Lisle Street, Charing Cross Road, Orange Street, and Whitcomb Street. The park at the centre of the Square is bound by Cranbourn Street, Leicester Street, Irving Street, and a section of road designated simply as Leicester Square. It is within the City of Westminster, not far from Trafalgar Square, east of Piccadilly Circus, Covent Garden, and Cambridge Circus.

In the middle of the Square is a small park with a 19th century statue of William Shakespeare, surrounded by dolphins. Each of the park’s four corner gates have one bust, depicting Sir Isaac Newton, the scientist; Sir Joshua Reynolds, the first President of the Royal Academy; John Hunter, a pioneer of surgery; and William Hogarth, the painter. The statue of film star and director Charlie Chaplin is the most recent addition. On the pavement are inscribed the distances in miles to countries of the former British Empire. Leicester Square is the centre of London’s cinema land. It is the prime location in London for major film premières and co-hosts the London Film Festival each year. The square is surrounded by floor mounted plaques with film stars names and handprints – similar to Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.

Clerkenwell is an area in the London Borough of Islington. Because of the large number of Italians living in the area from the 1850s until the 1960s, Clerkenwell was once called London’s “Little Italy”. The former Middlesex Prison on Sans Walk, known as The House of Detention Clerkenwell, became the setting for a production of Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Clerkenwell took its name from the Clerks’ Well in Farringdon Lane. In the Middle Ages the London Parish clerks used to perform annual biblical plays there. The well was incorporated into a 1980s building called Well Court. It remains visible through a window of that building on Farringdon Lane.