Area Rug Carpet Cleaning Port Hardy BC

Area Rug Carpet Cleaning Port Hardy BC, V0N 0A9 

Are your looking for area rug carpet cleaning Port Hardy BC?

Luv-A-Rug serves all of Port Hardy- call us call us about our FREE (limited) pickup/delivery service...

...or deliver your area rug to us where we will unload it from your vehicle for you!

We guarantee that whenever you bring in one of your dirty (and/or stinky) area rugs to us, we will give it back to you feeling so soft, fluffy and fresh smelling that you'll fall in love with your rug all over again!

Luv-A-Rug is located only 5 hour 18 min (493 km) away from Port Hardy


The result is a stunning rug with vibrant colours

Our family has a large antique Persian rug than came to us from my husband's mother.

We have had it for years and it needed care -- cleaning and repair of the fringe and one full side.

Luv a Rug did a beautiful job of both. The result is a stunning rug with vibrant colours and attractiveness that we didn't know it could have.

I only wish we had taken the rug to Luv a Rug sooner than we did!

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Noreen F.

Have You Seen All These Other Services Luv-A-Rug Provides?

  • Pet stain removal
  • Guaranteed pet odor removal
  • Custom rug repairs
  • Fringe repair & replacement
  • Authentic reweaving 
  • Flea & moth removal
  • Sail & boat top cleaning
  • Survival suit cleaning
  • Wetsuit odor removal
  • Firefighter turnout gear cleaning
  • Hockey equipment cleaning
  • Goalie equipment cleaning
  • Lacrosse equipment cleaning
  • Stuffed Animals cleaning
  • Horse blankets cleaning
  • Outdoor furniture cleaning
  • Luxury handbags cleaning
  • Wool & Silk rug cleaning cleaning

A little History of Port Hardy (courtesy of Wikipedia)

area rug carpet cleaning Port Hardy BC by Luv-A-Rug

Port Hardy’s culture and history begin near the BC Ferries Terminal at Bear Cove – the oldest known site of human habitation on Vancouver Island (circa 5850 BCE).

First contact with Europeans occurred in the early 19th century when the steamship S.S. Beaver was sent on an exploratory trip by the Hudson Bay Company (HBC) in 1836.

Coal deposits motivated the HBC to establish a fortified trading post at Beaver Harbour a dozen years later. The trading post was named “Fort Rupert” after the company’s governor, Prince Rupert, Duke of Bavaria. Though little of the fort remains today, the Kwakiutl First Nations continue to reside adjacent to the former fort site.

Port Hardy was named after Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Masterman Hardy who served as the captain of H.M.S. Victory.

Fun Fact: Port Hardy's twin city is Numata, Japan