House cleaning in Rush Green. Do you need home cleaning help?
London Carpet Cleaning is a professional cleaning company with over 14 years valuable experience in the carpet and upholstery cleaning in E12 house cleaning. If you are looking for information on carpet cleaning you came to the right place. For best results hire a professional carpet to help you with your cleaning in Rush Green.
Our main area for carpet cleaning and sofa cleaning includes South West London, West London, East London, North West London and north London and Rush Green.
Already a well established cleaning company, we provide a wide range of carpet cleaning and full house cleaning services to our customers across West London and E6 house cleaning
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We are a young and ambitious company looking to change the level of expectations in the cleaning business and impress all our customers in House cleaning in Rush Green.
We understand how pleasant cleaning your house can be, and your trust in us and our professional cleaning service is our priority in E6 house cleaning.

List of services we provide in RM7 Rush Green:
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In October 2001, Bass Brewers PLC, agreed a £150,000 sponsorship of the new stand, now named the Carling Stand. This provided the funds for the improvements to continue and a number of crush barriers were installed in 2002, which helped ease the flow of spectators around the ground along with a new walkway behind the covered terrace. Whilst the Dagenham & Redbridge record attendance is 5,949, set against Ipswich Town in January 2002, these improvements have enabled the ground to meet Football League status and the capacity is now 6,078. In July 2007 a new sponsorship deal was set up with the Barking and Dagenham London Borough Council with the stadium renamed the London Borough of Barking & Dagenham Stadium.[1]
After Keats's death, his sister Fanny became friends with Fanny Brawne. Fanny Keats and her husband Valentin Llanos occupied what had been Brown's half of the house from 1828 until 1831. Mrs Brawne died in December 1829 after an accident. By March 1830, the Brawnes had left the house.
Arnos Grove platforms, as seen from the southern end of platform 3.
On the night of 13 October 1940, a lone German aircraft dropped a single bomb on houses to the north of the station. The destruction of the houses caused the north end of the westbound platform tunnel to collapse, killing or injuring many people amongst those sheltering from the air raid. The train service was disrupted for two months. A memorial plaque (at the north end of the westbound platform) erroneously commemorates "sixteen Belgian refugees and... three British citizens who died" in the attack. The records of the civilian deaths held by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission indicate that in fact sixteen people died at the scene - only three of whom were Belgian - with a seventeenth dying in hospital the following day. Approximately twenty people were injured, but survived.
Originally plans were made and land purchased for this asylum to be built in proximity close to the existing 1st Middlesex County Asylum at Hanwell on ground that lies just on the other side of the Grand Union Canal. Perhaps the number of other asylums already in the area led to the decision to have it built elsewhere. The architect was Samuel Daukes, the design of which was based on the advice of John Conolly, the superintendent of the 1st Middlesex Asylum. It opened on the 17th of July, 1851 and was officially referred to as the 2nd Middlesex County Asylum with William Charles Hood (1824-1870) being its first medical superintendent.[2]
Information by Wikipedia.com