Local Professional Carpet Cleaning Tysons Corner VA

 

Your carpet is a big investment, but normal wear & tear can quickly leave it looking dull and dingy. When you decide to hire a professional carpet cleaner, how do you avoid companies who do more harm than good?

Top reasons why Tysons Corner, Va residents trust Mighty Clean Carpet Care for their carpet cleaning needs

 

Trained, Friendly, and IICRC Certified Technicians

 

When you call Mighty Clean Carpet Care, you don’t just get some guy with cleaning equipment. Our courteous and professional carpet cleaning technicians go through extensive training to learn the chemistry behind the solutions they use. Technicians are certified by the I.I.C.R.C. and trained to ensure they know the most effective ways to remove soils, tough stains, and protect your carpets to ensure they last for years to come.

Proven Eight Step Cleaning Process

 

Our carpet cleaning process utilizes the Hot Water Extraction method recommended by the major carpet manufacturers including Shaw Industries. Just as the best method for cleaning cloths requires hot water, detergent, and agitation, so does cleaning your carpets.

It’s All Backed by Our 100% Done Right the First Time Guarantee

 

We guarantee your satisfaction the first time every time. If you’re not totally satisfied with the results following your cleaning, we’ll return to clean any areas of concern at no cost to you. If for whatever reason your still not totally satisfied we’ll refund your money no questions asked.

Carpet Cleaning Tysons Corner VA

 

Tysons Corner is a census-designated place (CDP) in Fairfax County, Virginia, United States. Located in the heart of Northern Virginia, Tysons Corner lies between the community of McLean and the town of Vienna along the Capital Beltway (I-495). The population was 18,540 as of the 2000 census. It is the 12th largest business district in the United States.
The Tysons II, or Tysons Galleria, development area
The area is home to Tysons Corner Center – the largest shopping mall in the state and in the Baltimore-Washington area – and two upscale shopping centers Tysons Galleria and Fairfax Square, which neighbor it to the north and south. Every weekday, Tysons Corner draws 55,000 shoppers from around the region.

Tysons Corner has 46 million square feet (4.3 million m²) of office and retail space, making it an important business district in its own right and the classic example of an edge city.[5] Notable companies in the area typically use McLean or Vienna addresses rather than Tysons Corner.

Tysons Corner is the opposite of a bedroom community, with a daytime population greater than 100,000 and a nighttime population of less than 20,000. Local urban planners envision up to 200,000 jobs and 100,000 residents in coming decades.

Known originally as Peach Grove, the area received the designation Tysons Crossroads after the Civil War. William Tyson from Cecil County, Maryland, purchased a tract of land from A. Lawrence Foster.
Tyson, a Maryland native, was born about 1818. He and his wife Susan (nee Harvey) Tyson had nine children: Catherine, Lydia, Rebecca, Frances, Andrew, Anna, Harvey, Bessie, and Susan.
Tyson served as postmaster of the now discontinued Peach Grove Post Office 1854-1866. The Peach Grove Post office was established Tuesday, April 22, 1851.
Big changes came in 1963 when the Tysons area moved from a country crossroads to a giant commercial urban area with the awarding of contracts at the interchange of Route 7 and Route 123.

The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors in 1962 approved a Tysons Corner Shopping Center of 88.13 acres within 150 acres triangle bordered by Chain Bridge Road, Leesburg Pike, and the Capital Beltway. Developers proclaimed it as the largest enclosed mall in the world when it opened July 25, 1968.
To local residents, Tysons Corner is the area around the intersection of Virginia State Route 123 (Chain Bridge Road) and State Route 7 (Leesburg Pike), which, as recently as the 1950s, was a quiet rural intersection flanked by a few small stores. Tysons Corner Center, a large shopping mall, is located here, and is a main attraction for nonresidents. Tysons Corner also houses many smaller shopping centers and stores (including the Tysons Galleria mall), along with a significant number of car dealerships. In recent years, the influx of technology companies into Northern Virginia has brought many new office buildings and hotels to the landscape.