We Serve Allen Texas | We Have A Plumber Near You | Same Day Service | Why Wait?
Allen Plumbing experts in the following: Slab Leaks (Locate & Repair) Water Heater Installs and Repairs Certified Tankless water Heater Installations & Diagnostics Gas Line Repair or Replacement Drain Stoppages Drain Locate and Repair Faucets Garbage Disposal Hard to Find Leaks: Drain leaks, Vent leaks, Water leaks and Gas leaks, Shower Pan Demos and Installations.
Services We Offer In The Allen Texas Area: Serving All of North Texas • Residential & Commercial • Video Line Inspection • 15 Years’ Experience • Sewer Cleaning & Clogged Drains • Gas Line Repair or Replacement • Tank less Water Heater Installer • Slab Leak Repair Specialist • Emergency Service • Same Day Service • Drain Stoppages • And More! Aramendia plumbing Services give us a call at 214-504-2822 or 972-439-1006
As a family owned and operated company for over 22 years, we understand that reliability and trust are central to our continuing business. At Aramendia Plumbing Heating & Air of North Texas, our service professionals can be trusted to arrive on time and complete the job to your satisfaction. We take plumbing and HVAC needs seriously. While some may consider plumbing or heat/air conditioning issues minor problems, we believe that you need your plumbing working 24 hours a day. As you know, losing air conditioning in the middle of a Texas summer is not a minor problem. Our goal is to fix your problem as soon as reasonably possible. To that extent we have equipped our service trucks with the parts and supplies needed to fix every common issue on the first visit. The next time you are faced with a minor repair or major issue, let the professionals at Aramendia prove our worth to you today. We proudly serve North Dallas including, Allen, Frisco, Plano, Flower Mond, McKinney, Lewisville, Little Elm, Carrollton, Garland, Coppell, The Colony, Farmers Branch and many more! Contact us now! Aramendia Plumbing: give us a call at 214-504-2822 or 972-439-1006 Let us bring your plumbing back to life. If you have any plumbing questions give us a call!
Allen is a city in Collin County, Texas, United States, and a northern suburb of Dallas. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 43,554. As of 2007, the city's population is estimated at 77,644. Prior to the arrival of white settlers into the Allen area, Caddo and Comanche Indian tribes inhabited the region. The Indian tribes migrated westward as the early settlers entered the area and were eventually removed to the Indian Territory to the north of the Red River. One of the last known conflicts between the early settlers and the Indians took place in 1844 along Rowlett Creek near the existing railroad. An historic marker along SH 5 near Rowlett Creek commemorates the event. Immigrants of European descent began arriving into the Allen area in the early 1840s in search of free land, traveling the Texas Road and the Central National Road, constructed by the Republic of Texas. A stage line ran from Bonham through McKinney to Allen and Plano, crossing Rowlett Creek where SH 5 now crosses. Allen was part of the Peter’s Colony Land Grant from the Republic of Texas to the Texas Emigration & Land Company.
The Houston and Texas Central Railroad (H&TC), constructed through Allen in 1872, laid out the original township of Allen. The H&TC was acquired by J.P. Morgan & Company in 1877 and by the Southern Pacific in 1883. In 1918, the H&TC erected a combination freight/passenger depot in the Allen Central Business District. The first train robbery in Texas took place in Allen on February 22, 1878, when Sam Bass and his associates pillaged the train. Allen was a short ride from their hideouts in the Elm Trinity brush lands. In 1907, the Texas Traction Company (Interurban) purchased right-of-way on the west side of the H&TC main line track and constructed an interurban line through Allen as a stop on its route from Denison to Dallas in 1908. In 1915 a devastating fire destroyed most of the business district between the interurban tracks and the railroad. Texas Electric Railway, the successor to Texas Traction Company, ceased operations on December 31, 1948, and the population of Allen declined to 400 in 1950. The town was officially incorporated in 1953 and Home Rule Status was adopted in 1979, with a Council/Manager form of government. The construction of highway US 75 in 1960 had a similar impact on Allen’s future as the railroad almost a century before. In the 1980s, Developmental Learning Materials and InteCom, Inc. relocated to Allen, leading the way for further corporate startups and relocations. From Wikipedia.
Aramendia Plumbing Heating & Air of North Texas Contact us at 214-504-2822 or 972-439-1006 Sewer & Drain Save $50 Off Water Heaters $10 Off Drain & Sewer Cleaning Allen.