Boston Upholstery Cleaning
AviShayCarpet.com is proud to serve as Boston’s premier upholstery cleaning service covering all aspects of household maintenance, with every kind of work handled, from the residential in nature to those commercial and industrial. No job is too small or too big for our professional technicians! Accredited by the Better Business Bureau, AviShayCarpet.com is able to fully guarantee all work because we are licensed, bonded, and insured, with real craftsmen so seasoned that they can even restore fine antiques and heirlooms back to a pristine state! Our prices are also literally unbeatable: find a lower written estimate and AviShayCarpet.com will match it! Be sure to remember AviShayCarpet.com for all the upholstery cleaning you need to have done. Choose AviShayCarpet.com for the service and savings you deserve!
AviShayCarpet.com covers Acton, Allston,Andover, Ashland, Barnstable, Bedford, Belmont, Billerica, Boston, Braintree, Brewster, Brighton, Brookline, Burlington, Cambridge, Canton, Cape Cod, Carlisle, Charlestown, Chatham, Chelmsford, Chestnut Hill, Concord, Dennis, Dover, Everett, Framingham, Franklin, Gloucester, Groton, Hyde Park, Jamaica Plain, Kingston, Lexington, Malden, Maynard, Medfield, Milford, Milton, Medford, Natick, Needham, Newton, Newton Highlands, Newton Lower Falls, Norwood, Orleans, Peabody, Plymouth, Provincetown, Quincy, Randolph, Reading, Revere, Sandwich, Saugus, Sharon, Sherborn, Somerville, Stoughton, Sudbury, Truro, Wakefield, Waltham, Watertown, Wellesley, Wellfleet, West Roxbury, Weston, Westwood, Weymouth, Winchester, Woburn, Yarmouth, and other communities throughout Massachusetts.
Boston Factoids
One of the most important cities in the United States, Boston is home to numerous American firsts, including the first public school, first lighthouse, first public park, first municipal police department, and first subway system of the country. Though famous for the Boston Tea Party, the city is often called “Beantown” – for Boston baked beans! Boston is also nicknamed “the Walking City” because its layout tends to encourage foot traffic (as well as because of the large student population).

