Carpet Cleaning Perivale
CONTACT US USING THE FORM ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE SITE –>
Perivale is a small suburb 10 miles (16 km) west of central London
in the London Borough of Ealing. For most of its history, it was
part of the county of Middlesex. Until the fifteenth century it was
called Greenford Parva (Little Greenford). Landmarks in the suburb
include the A40, a large road that connects Central London with the
M40 motorway, and the large Art Deco Hoover Building, as well as St
Mary’s Church (C:15th century), the River Brent and Perivale Wood
Bird Reserve run by the Selborne Society.
A large part of Perivale is used in the form of a business and
industrial park. Although mainly residential, there are some office
blocks and parades of shops on Bilton Road, A40 slip road and in the
Medway Village. It is home to one of the first American-style diners
in the UK called Starvin’ Marvin’s. Perivale is also home to two
golf courses; Ealing Golf Club and Perivale Golf Course.
Before the 1930s residential building expansion, the fields of
Perivale were used to grow hay for the working horses of Victorian
London, a scene described in the ending of John Betjeman’s poem
‘Return to Ealing’:
“…And a gentle gale from Perivale/blows up the hayfield
scent.”

