Local Professional Carpet Cleaning Mount Vernon 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 Mount Vernon, 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 Mount Vernon VA

 

Mount Vernon is in Fairfax County, Virginia, United States. Nearby CDPs are Fort Belvoir (west) and Fort Hunt, Virginia (north), The population was 28,582 at the 2000 census.

While “Mount Vernon” — drawn from the Mount Vernon plantation, the home of George Washington located south of Alexandria — is often used locally to refer to the entire unincorporated area between Old Town Alexandria and Fort Belvoir, Mount Vernon as defined by the Census Bureau encompasses only the part of it coextensive with Alexandria ZIP code 22309, bounded by the Potomac River to the south, Fort Belvoir to the west, Huntley Meadows Park to the north, and Little Hunting Creek to the east.

At this same time, the Spencer family was in a legal dispute over additional land sales to Lawrence’s neighbors. To adjudicate the boundary line dispute, a general court for Prince William County ordered a new survey of the entire 5,000 acre (20 km²) Washington-Spencer land grant. The surviving map of that 1741 survey, a plat, by County Surveyor Robert Brooke, revealed the estate had been grossly mis-measured back in April 1669, and it contained only about 4,200 acres (17 km²), not the 5,000 acres (20 km2) conveyed in the 1674 land grant. The gross mis-measurement can be attributed to the fact that the property was bounded on three sides by water, and that neither the River nor the two creeks ran straight. Pursuant to the Culpeper land grant, the original 1669 surveyor was charged with estimating an area of 5,000 acres (20 km²) and then blazing a straight-line “back” boundary along a tree line between the winding courses of Dogue Run and Little Hunting Creek. More importantly, this surviving May 1741 property survey by Brooke reveals that the location of the present-day mansion house was then vacant, with the Washingtons depicted as having their Quarter alongside Little Hunting Creek (as was shown on a similar, larger-scale Potomac River survey of 1738).