San Francisco Bay Area Carpet Cleaning Yellow Pages BY AT&T INTERACTIVE

12 Carpet Cleaning listings found in San Francisco Bay Area

Commercial Cleaning Since 1945 - Green Environmental Specialists
Use a telephone to call (888) 272-4228 440 Bryant St, San Francisco, CA 94107
Full Service Carpet & Rug Cleaning - Quality Work At A Quality Price
Use a telephone to call (877) 558-3599
America's # 1 Carpet Cleaning - Satisfaction Guaranteed
Use a telephone to call (888) 519-2752
Commercial & Residential - Satisfaction Guaranteed
Use a telephone to call (866) 586-2856 17 Sky Lark Dr #46, Larkspur, CA 94939
Commercial & Residential - Satisfaction Guaranteed
Use a telephone to call (866) 889-3678 17 Sky Lark Dr #46, Larkspur, CA 94939
Carpet & Rug Cleaners - Quality Service & Competitive Price
Use a telephone to call (888) 377-9354
Residential & Commercial - 8 Years Experience
Use a telephone to call (888) 820-8351
100% Satisfaction Guaranteed - Best Prices in Town
Use a telephone to call (866) 316-6817
Carpet Rug & Upholstery Steam Clean - Commercial * Residential * Govt.
Use a telephone to call (888) 385-6005
Serving Fremont Exclusively - 30 Years Experience
Use a telephone to call (888) 265-0526
Eco Safe, Organic - Carpet & Rug Cleaning
Use a telephone to call (888) 293-6151
Carpet & Rug Cleaners - 24 Hour Emergency Service
Use a telephone to call (888) 836-9049
Map of San Francisco Bay Area
San Francisco is the fourteenth most populous city in the United States, with roughly 800K residents thrust in a 7 by 7 square mile region. It is not a high density city by most standards though and many are surprised when they hear it's rather small geographically speaking. It's located at the very northernmost tip of the San Francisco Peninsula, surrounded by the bay and the Pacific ocean. The California Gold Rush in 1848 resulted in SF becoming a fast growing hot spot and the fact that an ample water supply from the Hetchy Hetchy reserve in Lake Tahoe was available guaranteed SF could handle future growth. San Francisco was devastated by the 1906 earthquake and the stories live on today of the survivors. Actually it was the ensuing fires that really wrecked the city. Most of San Francisco back then and even today was built out of wood which did a pretty good job of surviving the trembler. Experts agree another big one is due in the next 30 years. The city by the bay is a popular international tourist center, famous for its summer fog, ridiculously steep hills, and Victorian buildings. Ride the cable cars, go atop the Transamerica Pyramid building, walk across the Golden Gate bridge or spend a day in Golden Gate Park. There are just too many things to do in this great city. Popular neighborhoods include: Financial District, Chinatown, Noe valley, The Mission, North Beach, Presidio, The Sunset, Haight-Ashbury, Western Addition, Alamo Square, Japantown, Nob Hill, Telegraph Hill, The Richmond, SoMa, and Bayview-Hunters Point.