Postcode 3011, Exit Cleaning or Bond Cleaners or Deep Cleaning

Melbourne cleaners,

Nu1 in Melbourne is cleaning services by Mr Meticulous Cleaning providing regular, End of Lease, Builders, Deep cleaning, Bond, office cleaning.

About Melbourne 3011

Exit cleaners

Hire Professional Home Cleaning in Melbourne

Mr Meticulous Cleaning is a reputed cleaning company with a highly trained and skilled team who offers services to the inner and wider Melbourne area. We specialise in cleaning, Final Cleans, bond Cleaning, Exit Cleaning and Window Cleaning, and we also service Strata Cleaning.

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Final Cleans + Deep cleaning + Exit Cleaning + Window cleaning + Strata Cleaning + in Melbourne.

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Mr Meticulous Cleaning offers efficient final cleans + deep cleaning+ window Cleaning + strata cleaning +Exit Cleaning. Every clean scheduled with Mr Meticulous Cleaning is fully insured. We have cleaners verify police checks and supply their cleaning tools & chemicals.

Guarantees Satisfaction

Our cleaning service is designed to fit around your schedule, providing your best professional home cleaning in Melbourne is done efficiently. Our experts make sure you get 100% effective cleaning. While cleaning your place, we ensure minimal disruption to your day when completing your cleaning tasks.

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Mr Meticulous cleaning platform connects you with trusted, safe, and qualified cleaners for window cleaning + final cleans, exit cleaning services, bond cleaning, green cleaning, deep cleaning. We ensure 100% Happiness—same-day online bookings available Australia-wide.

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Mr Meticulous has offered cleaning services in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and the Gold Coast for close to 30 years, with many long-term happy clients. No cleaning task is too big or small for our cleaners. We have a unique strategy for every job of home cleaning in Melbourne.

At Mr Meticulous – will put the sparkle back into your place! Call us at 9904 1905 or email us at [email protected] and let’s get you that service you want – deserve.

End Of Lease Cleaning Services in Melbourne or Bond Cleaning or Final Cleans by Trusted and Verified Mr Meticulous Cleaning Services Melbourne

Mr Meticulous Bond Cleaning and our End of Lease Cleaning have been looking after Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and the Gold Coast properties since 1995, close to 30 years now.

A highly trained and skilled team of cleaners who take great pride in the results they achieve. Our end-of-lease cleaning has been looking after Melbourne clients and doing all the real estate exit cleans, bond cleans, or the Deep Cleaning properties required us to do so for so long.

Mr Meticulous End of Lease cleaning service understands the importance of providing a spick and span, detailed clean before new tenants move in.

Our Bond Cleaning Service not only offers general cleaning, but we also can do an entire Oven + Stove Top. Range Hood cleans back to nearly new, we offer carpet steam cleaning, window cleaning, high pressure – gerni cleaning, wall cleaning, mould removal, there is no service we do not do so that getting your end of lease cleaning service done 100% to guarantee your money back so that your bond money is returned.

Whether we are cleaning for a ONE-OFF deep cleaning service for, say, an end of builders cleans or a shop fit-out cleaning service, all final building and construction cleaning is attended to with kit cloves so that the handover is flawless and faultless. We know what builders and the homeowners want in the standard and finished the handover. We had completed hundreds of builders cleans. All that work that goes into a building and managing a project, the last thing you want is for this builder clean to go wrong at the previous stage….. we are your cleaners, your only safety net to hand over.

End of Lease Cleaning and the Bond Cleaning Service is something that we have become well known for. We have completed 1000’s of end of lease cleaning jobs for individuals and real estate agencies. We see the degree of perfection an end of lease cleaning is expected to be handed back in.

You are welcome to contact us to enquire further, receive a quote, or book your clean with us on 9904 1905 or [email protected] 

Property owners, Property managers and former Tenants can feel confident that they will receive a cleaning result that will make the transition easy, both for the new tenants moving in; and the former tenants in their bid to acquire their bond back (understanding the end decision is made by the property agency or owner and is based on the requirements as per the tenant’s lease).

For that stress-free end of lease experience, you can trust us at Mr Meticulous Cleaning Services Melbourne.

You are welcome to contact us to enquire further, get a free estimate, or book your clean with us. You can find more information about Melbourne from Wikipedia.

Below was taken From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia jump.

Footscray, Victoria

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Footscray
MelbourneVictoria
The Footscray Hotel on Hopkins Street
FootscrayFootscrayLocation in metropolitan Melbourne
CoordinatesFootscray Melbourne 301137.798°S 144.899°ECoordinatesFootscray Melbourne 301137.798°S 144.899°E
Population16,345 (2016 census)[1]
 • Density3,300/km2 (8,500/sq mi)
Postcode(s)3011
Area5 km2 (1.9 sq mi)
Location5 km (3 mi) from Melbourne
LGA(s)City of Maribyrnong
State electorate(s)Footscray
Federal division(s)Fraser
Suburbs around Footscray:MaidstoneMaribyrnongFlemingtonWest FootscrayFootscrayWest MelbourneKingsvilleSeddonYarraville

Footscray is an inner-western suburb of Melbourne, Australia, 5 km from Melbourne’s Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Maribyrnong. At the 2016 census, Footscray had a population of 16,345.[1]

Footscray is characterised by a very diverse, multicultural central shopping area, which reflects the successive waves of immigration experienced by Melbourne, and by Footscray in particular. Once a centre for Greek, Italian and former Yugoslavian migrants, it later became a hub for Vietnamese and East African immigrants in Melbourne. It has recently begun to undergo rapid development and gentrification, and Timeout Magazine placed Footscray at 13th in its ’50 Coolest Neighbourhoods in the World’ for 2019, reflecting its evolving reputation; citing in particular its diverse array of international cuisine, bars and nightlife, as well as its arts scene.[2]

Footscray is named after Foots Cray, on the River Cray in London, England.[3]

Contents

History[edit]

Photograph of a bridge over the Maribyrnong River, showing a man wearing a hat standing in the middle of the movable section. The building on the hill in the background was known as Malakoff’s Castle.

Footscray is part of the City of Maribyrnong and was built largely on the traditional lands of the Kulin nation.[4]

For thousands of years, Footscray was the meeting place of the lands of the Yalukit-willan, the Marin-balluk and the Wurundjeri. Koories stalked game, collected food and fished along the river junction, estuaries, swamps and lagoons. Within Melbourne’s western region, the Marin-balug and Kurung-jand-balug clans of the Woiwurrung cultural group, and the Yalukit willam clan of the Boonwurrung cultural group shared the luscious resources around the Maribyrnong Valley.[5]

The first European to visit the area was Charles Grimes in 1803. A park, where he landed, is named after him at Napier St.[6]

In 1839 a punt (cable ferry) was built on the Maribyrnong River, it was the only connecting link between Melbourne and GeelongBallaratCastlemaine and Bendigo. The Punt Hotel opened three years later and was the first building in the area. During the first decade drovers transporting cattle and sheep provided the only business at the hotel. After 1851, when gold was discovered out west, the pub did a roaring trade with diggers. Part of the old pub still stands and it has been renamed The Pioneer. (Ref: Charlie Lovett’s Footscray)

The Post Office first opened on 12 October 1857.[7]

Footscray was declared a municipality in 1859 with a population of 300 and 70 buildings. Around the same year the first bridge was built across Saltwater (now Maribyrnong) River. (Ref: Charlie Lovett’s Footscray)

Between 1881 and 1891 Footscray’s population more than tripled from almost 6,000 to 19,000. (Ref: Charlie Lovett’s Footscray)

Footscray developed into an industrial zone in the second half of the nineteenth century, with the manufacturing industry beginning to decline in the 1960s and 70s.[6]

The Footscray Magistrates’ Court closed on 1 February 1985.[8]Looking east towards the City of Melbourne from FootscrayPaisley Street in central Footscray

People[edit]

Railway Bridges and Maribyrnong River – Footscray 2020

Footscray was home to the Aboriginal Woiwurrung and Boonwurrung tribes of the Kulin nation.[9]

In 2011, Footscray’s 13,193 residents[10] came from 135 countries.[11]

In 2006 less than half the population (41.1%) was born in Australia,[12] the main countries of overseas origin are Vietnam, China, India, United Kingdom and Italy. In the 21st Century, Maribyrnong of which Footscray is a part, saw a major increase in residents from SudanEthiopiaSomaliaBangladeshSri Lanka and Myanmar, including a large proportion of refugees.[13]

Footscray has Victoria’s fourth-highest proportion of residents born in South-East Asia (13.9%).[14]

The average person in Footscray is 33 years of age.[15]

Maribyrnong Council predicts a population boom will more than double Footscray resident numbers from 14,100 to 30,500 by 2031, requiring about 7000 new dwellings.[16]

Politics[edit]

Footscray falls within the federal electorate of Gellibrand (currently held by Tim Watts from the ALP) and the state electorate of Footscray (currently held by the ALP’s Katie Hall), and the City of Maribyrnong at local level ( 2020 election: 3 Labor, 1 Independent, 2 Green, 1 Socialist councillors). The suburb’s historical voting patterns have been fairly typical of a working-class suburb with a high migrant population. Footscray is a very safe state ALP seat, 65% of the vote went to Labor at the 2014 State election.[17]

Consistent with other inner-city electorates in Melbourne, and other state capitals, voter support for the Australian Greens has increased in recent years; the Greens received 17 per cent of the primary vote in Footscray at the 2014 State Election.[17] One third of voters at the Central Footscray booth voted for the Australian Greens in the 2010 Federal election, almost doubling the Greens vote in one election cycle.[18]

At the Federal Election of 2010, the ALP won Gellibrand, which includes Footscray, with 59% of the vote. The Lib/Nat parties got 23%, whilst The Greens saw a swing of +6% with 15% of the vote.[19]

Janet Rice of The Greens was elected to Maribyrnong Council in 2003, re-elected in 2005 and then elected mayor in 2006.[20] Whilst Mayor, Janet had a Mayoral bike instead of a car.[21]

The first Vietnamese woman mayor was Mai Ho, from 1997 to 1998.[22] Mai Ho arrived in Australia in December 1982 with two small daughters and sixteen dollars. By 1997 she was Mayor of Maribyrnong. Twelve months later her daughter, Tan Le, was voted Young Australian of the Year.[23]

Food[edit]

In 2013, there were over 130 restaurants in Footscray, including; 30 Vietnamese, 20 Indian, 17 Chinese and several; African, Australian, Indonesian, Italian, Thai, Turkish and Japanese. Footscray also has one each of the following restaurants; Croatian, Korean, Malaysian and Portuguese.[24] Subway and Nandos are the only multi-national corporate food outlets in central Footscray.

Notable restaurants include the Station Hotel, the winner of radio 3AW’s “Pub of the Year” award.[25]

The Footscray Market is a large indoor fresh produce and seafood market, with 33 food stalls and 50 general stalls,[26] catering particularly to the various ethnicities and local restaurants. It is located opposite Footscray railway station.

The Melbourne Wholesale Market on Footscray Road (often referred to as the Footscray Traders Market) moved to Epping in 2015.[27]

Another large market in Footscray was Little Saigon, which opened in 1992 to cater to Asian population growth, but had customers from all backgrounds. Little Saigon was noisy and crowded, with a wide array of tropical fruits and Asian produce. However, this market was destroyed in a large fire on 13 December 2016, with more than $12 million worth of damage. As of 2021, there are plans to rebuild the market.[28][29][30]

Culture[edit]

Footscray has some fine 1930s Art Deco buildings, most in disrepair and hidden behind shop signs and awnings.[31]

The former Footscray Town Hall is the only American Romanesque civic building in Victoria. The outside is a mix of Art Deco, Moderne, Celtic, Spanish and Medieval.[32]

Footscray Park is one of the largest and most intact examples of an Edwardian park in Australia; characteristic features include rustic stonework, ornamental ponds and extensive use of palms. The 15-hectare park is classified as a heritage place on the Victorian Heritage Register.[33] The ‘heavily indebted’[34] local Council approved a 1.8 million makeover for the park in March 2011.[35] In 2019, Council failed to privatize one third of the park.

In popular culture[edit]

Footscray has been the setting of several Australian movies.

In 1992, the film Romper Stomper was set in and filmed in and around Footscray. It deals with a fictional gang of neo-Nazi skinheads and their battle against Vietnamese immigrants. Not all scenes were filmed locally: the “Footscray Railway Station” featured in the movie has a pedestrian underpass, while the real station has an overpass for foot traffic; the actual station used for filming was Richmond Station.

The 1994 film Metal Skin and the 2015 film Pawno are also set in and around Footscray.

The song Footscray Station by Melbourne band Camp Cope is about Footscray, where the lead singer and guitarist Georgia Maq, originally from Kew, resides.

Australian pop punk outfit Nö Class frequently reference Footscray in their lyrics, such as their 2018 hit Carry Me Home, which centres around the legendary establishment the Footscray Hotel.

Groups[edit]

Live in Flemington not FootscrayFootscray streetscape, prior to a multimillion-dollar street redevelopment in 2012

Asylum Seeker Resource Centre on Nicholson Street gives aid, welfare and medical care for thousands of asylum seekers.

The Australian Croatian Association headquarters is located in Footscray, serving the large Croatian Community in the area. Other Ethnic Community, Migrants and Refugees groups include African, Albanian, Burmese, Chinese, Croatian or Bosnian, Ethiopian, Filipino, Greek, Harari, Hungarian, Italian, Macedonian, Multicultural, Polish, Russian, Spanish and Latin American, Sudanese and Vietnamese.[36]

The Footscray Club is a social club that has been part of Footscray since 1894. This was the original Footscray Cycle Club, when cycling became quite popular in Australia in the 19th century. By 1909 the club had built a permanent site on Paisley Street where it still stands today. Early in the last century the club evolved into a purely local social club where members of the local community meet and socialize to this day.

The Footscray Historical Society works on a number of local fronts to record and preserve the history of the area. The Society has an active membership who take part in a range of activities to assist this endeavour. Records such as rare books, business records and correspondence are held at the Society’s headquarters at Ercildoune, built in 1876 as a branch of the National Bank of Australasia. The Society owns this historic building and has had the interior and exterior restored. Tours, forums and discussions are held regularly.

Footscray is at the centre of the Kariwara Scout district of Scouts Australia. The word ‘Kariwara’ means ‘West’ in a local Aboriginal dialect.[37] Started in 1909, the 1st Footscray Scout hall is a historic building next to the Footscray Police Station in Hyde Street. 3rd Footscray is the hall seen from the railway line and no longer has youth programs but is home to adult training. The 2nd Footscray Scout hall has a modern brick hall after the first hall burnt down in 1982. The group has programs for children aged 7 to 26 and meets at Guadion Park in Barkly Street. The 10th Footscray Scout group is in Essex Street next to the YMCA and has programs for 7- to 15-year-olds. The 5th Footscray group is opposite Seddon railway station and has programs for 6- to 15-year-olds. All are part of Scouts Australia.

Maribyrnong Truck Action Group and Less Trucks For Moore work towards cleaning the air in Footscray and surrounding suburbs.

Other groups include; Footscray Traders Association, Footscray Asian Business Association, Save Railway Place, Footscray Sings Fair Go for Footscray Rail Residents and Footscray Rotary.