Regular vacuum cleaning in addition to on time professional steam cleaning will ensure to maintain your rugs in a perfect condition. We at Carpet Cleaning Group recommend that you have your rugs cleaned every 6 to 12 months. You should know that if you are looking for the highest level of professional rug cleaning, then you have come to the right place.
Our Oriental rug cleaning specialists understand and respect the amount of money you have invested in these pieces of artwork. And we can assure you that we will treat them as delicately as we would our own. We also recommend a special sanitiser and deodoriser for your precious rugs to minimize and kill most of the germs, dust mites and bacterias and leave them with a pleasant and fresh smell at the end of the cleaning. Just give us a call and we will assist you in choosing the best way to fit your budget and busy schedule. Our contacts are provided below.
Carpet Cleaning Group services the following areas of West Central London:
Grays Inn, Strand, Bloomsbury, Holborn and Covent Garden. Gray’s Inn Road is a major road in the London Borough of Camden. It is named after one of the main Inns of Court. The road starts in Holborn, near Chancery Lane tube station and the London Borough of Islington and the boundaries of the City of London. It forms the boundary between Clerkenwell to the east and Holborn, Bloomsbury and finally St Pancras to the west. The road passes the Eastman Dental Hospital and the UCL Eastman Dental Institute, Gray’s Inn, ITN, ITV and the London Welsh Centre.
Where it meets Cromer Street and Acton Street, it turns into a one-way system heading towards Kings Cross station. Throughout its route Gray’s Inn Road continues high above the valley of the River Fleet to the east. In earlier times it used to be the principal route from London to Hampstead.
Bloomsbury is an area between Euston Road and Holborn. It is under the authority of the London Borough of Camden, and is in the Parliamentary constituency of Holborn and St Pancras. It was developed by the Russell family in the 17th and 18th centuries into a fashionable residential area.
It is notable for its array of garden squares, literary connections, and numerous hospitals and academic institutions. Bloomsbury Square was laid out in 1660 by Thomas Wriothesley, 4th Earl of Southampton as Southampton Square. Bloomsbury is home to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the British Museum, and the British Medical Association.
It is also home to the University of London’s Senate House Library, its central departments, including the School of Advanced Study, and several of its colleges (University College London, Birkbeck, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, School of Pharmacy, School of Oriental and African Studies and the Royal Veterinary College). It includes the noble hospitals: Great Ormond Street Hospital, the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, University College Hospital and the Royal London Homoeopathic Hospital. The central points of Bloomsbury are Tavistock Square and Russell Square, which contain several large tourist hotels and links. The area east of Southmpton Row includes the Brunswick shopping centre and cinema, and Coram’s Fields recreation area. The area to the north of Coram’s Fields consists mainly of blocks of flats, built both as private and social housing, and is generally considered part of St Pancras or King’s Cross.
