Somerville Upholstery Cleaning

Choose AviShayCarpet.com and get expert upholstery cleaning service in Somerville for all household fabrics, with no job too big or small for our team of qualified technicians! We also work in commercial and industrial environments performing all manner of work. Accredited by the Better Business Bureau, AviShayCarpet.com is able to fully guarantee all work because we are licensed, bonded, and insured in the great State of Massachusetts, with experienced craftsmen who can even restore fine antiques and heirlooms back to a pristine state! Finally, our prices are 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.

Somerville Factoids

Somerville had seceded from now-adjacent Charlestown in the middle of the nineteenth century due to the latter’s increasing urbanization, but Somerville soon turned industrial on its own and became a working-class city for over a century. Somerville now hosts a thriving avant-garde arts community and a vibrant coffeehouse scene with each establishment having its own fiercely loyal patrons. The city may still be most famous, however, for marshmallow crème, invented by a Somerville resident in 1917.