cheap mattresses roseville mn

cheap mattresses roseville mn

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Cheap Mattresses Roseville Mn

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Roseville, MN Furniture & Mattress Store Store Monday - Saturday 10:00 AM - 09:00 PMSunday 11:00 AM - 06:00 PM Located in Rosedale Mall 2710 Snelling Ave. N. Get Directions to Slumberland Furniture in Roseville, MN Hours for Roseville, MN 10:00 am - 9:00 pm 10:00 am - 8:00 pm 11:00 am - 6:00 pm$2,500 Giveaway - Enter Now! $2,500 Giveaway - Enter Now! 7% Tax Relief Code: TAXRELIEF Shop the Schneiderman's Top 20 Shop the Top 20! "Only rich people can afford cheap furniture." –Max Schneiderman Find a Showroom Near You Recycling & Waste Beds (Mattresses and Box Springs) DisposalIf you are purchasing a new mattress, ask the store if they will take your old one. If not, contact your trash hauler or one of the disposal companies listed below. Call to verify items accepted, hours and fees. RecycleMetal bed frames can be recycled as scrap metal. If your mattress is in good condition, clean and free of bed bugs, you can donate it to one of the recycle companies listed below.




(Formerly Dania Furniture)2875 Snelling Ave NRoseville, MN 55113-1788651.636.7333 (phone)Store Hours10am - 8pm (Monday)10am - 8pm (Tuesday)10am - 8pm (Wednesday)10am - 8pm (Thursday)10am - 8pm (Friday)10am - 6pm (Saturday)11am - 6pm (Sunday) We encourage you to contact the store nearest you for any additional questions you might have. Our friendly staff can help you with design ideas and assist you with any custom order items. go back to locationsSkip to Search Form Skip to Page Content Yelp users haven’t asked any questions yet about Mattress Firm Roseville. Mattress Firm stores feature more than 55 different models of mattresses from top mattress brands such as Temur-Pedic, Sealy Posturepedic, Serta, and Simmons Beautyrest. We also carry specialty mattresses and bedding products incorporating the latest sleep technology, including pressure relieving memory foam mattresses. Our stores are designed around the "Comfort by Color" concept, which allows guests to easily compare the different comfort levels of the mattresses: Firm (Yellow), Plush (Orange), Pillow Top (Red), Contoured (Green) and Personalized (Blue).




Since opening in Houston in 1986, Mattress Firm has grown to over 3000 mattress stores across 47 states and has become the nation's largest mattress retailer.  We offer our guests comfortable store environments, highly-trained sales professionals, and guarantees on price, comfort, and service.  Mattress Firm is committed to making sure our guests sleep happy.The Anoka County website is at a new address! We're sorry for the inconvenience, but Anoka County has moved its web pages to a new site to provide more information and services to citizens. The page you requested - show-item-info-iframe.aspx?id=74 - Please go to our new home page at the search box or the menus at the top of the page to find whatClick to Rate10/15/2016We bought a bed set, mattresses, a few lights and put money down on a coffee table set that was out of stock but they said they would order. The mattresses and lights seem to be good so far. The bedframe did have a piece broken off out of the box but it was a part hidden under the bed so we didn't stress about it.




We waited a month for the coffee table to show up which it never did so we went to get our money back. The first person we talked to said we could only get store credit which is dumb because they never gave us what we paid for, but the manager gave us our money back without a fuss. Overall, they have a large selection but a lot of stuff is "out of stock" so you have to pre-pay and roll the dice. You get what you pay for so you might not get the best quality items and the staff is average but the manager seems to be knowledgeable and is willing to work with you.ShareFlag10/08/2016Leroy was a great help. I will be coming back to American freight to buy more furniture. First and last stop for furnitureShareFlag10/07/2016Monte Cody LeRoy Shawn were very knowledgeable and helpful above all professional I would recommend to anyone to stop in and check American Freight Furniture you won't be disappointed! ��������ShareFlag03/22/2015Went there just yesterday looking for pieces to furnish my first home.




The customer service was great from the second I walked through the door. Staff is very knowledgable and enthusiastic, especially Cherie Trinka, and the prices are very affordable. I would recommend American Freight to anybody!ShareFlag03/21/2015Cherie- She was awesome!! Very good customer service skills. I really liked the prices and can't wait to enjoy the furniture I picked out. I would definitely recommend this place and to see Cherie for any help they may have. Brian R.ShareFlag03/17/2015Love this place reasonable prices great costumer service #Rob carterShareFlag03/07/2015Great prices and excellent customer customer serviceShareFlag03/06/2015Great customer service and great unbeatable prices!ShareFlag03/04/2015My experience at American Freight was great; Cherie Trinka did an excellent job helping me find exactly what I wanted! Thank you Davenna N.ShareFlag03/01/2015My experience for the first time at this store in Roseville on Febuary 22 for my boyfriend and I was amazing.Thanks to Cherie Trinka who was great at her customer service techniques.




We felt very welcomed and pleased with our furniture decisions.WHAT WE ACCEPT FOR DONATION Armoires: 6’ (h) x 4’ (w) or smaller Bed frames: YES: metal, 4-sided and folding, NO: headboards, footboards and wooden rails Bookcases/cabinets: 6’ (h) x 4’ (w) or smaller Chairs: kitchen and upholstered (lift chairs ok) Desks: 4’ (w) x 2’ (d) or smaller Entertainment centers: 6’ (h) x 4’ (w) or smaller Futons (complete set only) Mattresses and box springs: YES: twin, full, queen, king size accepted; NO: cribs, electrical beds, bunk beds, trundle beds, captain’s beds, sleeper sofas, or rollaways Sofas, loveseats, and ottomans (no sleeper sofas) Stools: counter and bar height Tables: kitchen and dining (no glass top tables)Twin Cities residents buy about 350,000 new mattresses each year, according to the International Sleep Products Association. Of the old ones they replace, about half are reused or given away. But the other half are discarded or dumped, causing problems when the mattresses -- designed to last, not biodegrade -- take up space without breaking down in landfills.




Their sturdy steel springs are so difficult to compress that they can damage compactors, so entire mattresses end up getting dumped in landfills, where they tend to float to the top after other trash decomposes, dirty but intact. Finally, in an age of increasing environmental awareness, mattress-recycling operations are beginning to crop up. Minnesota now has two, including one in southeast Minneapolis that's been fully functional since April. "Welcome to Mattressville," Douglas Jewett said as he meandered through the basement of a Minneapolis warehouse on 15th Avenue SE., where dozens of mattresses stand on end, waiting to be stripped and gutted so the materials in them can be put to new uses. A $200,000 start-up boost from Hennepin County helped Jewett -- chief operating officer for PPL Industries, a nonprofit that offers hands-on skills training -- start the service. "Everything has to be recycled," said Jewett, who has a manufacturing background and has led recycling programs before.




"The longer you wait, the more it costs to get it back." And when mattresses are filled with materials that could have lives beyond their original uses, such as the steel innards and polyurethane foam, finding a way to redistribute those commodities for reuse makes sense, Jewett said. In the Minneapolis facility, a custom-built machine crams and shapes the mattresses' bare steel skeletons into a bale, which is then weighed, tagged and picked up, sold and reused. So far, the steel is the most valuable part of a discarded mattress with the most reuse potential. A given mattress' steel is worth about $16 to PPL, Jewett said. Many components of a mattress can be refashioned, if properly deconstructed. The steel and foam can be melted down, and the low-grade cotton shows promise for use in oil and storm water filtration, said Tim Hagen, research coordinator for the University of Minnesota Duluth's Natural Resources Research Institute. Hennepin County commissioned him in June 2008 to research new uses for old mattress materials and explore marketing those second-life products.




For now, the shoddy, outer fabric and wood are primarily used to generate heat, but that could change as a push for mattress recycling yields further research, Hagen said. "Like any recycling process, you've got to separate the individual components and properly prepare them for the marketplace," Hagen said. Jewett anticipates his program will reach the 40,000-mattress-a-year mark within two years, though he estimated it'll be about a decade before mattress recycling is integrated in the mainstream of refuse handling. That's a reasonable goal, given the size of the metro area, said Greg Conkins, contributed goods manager for Goodwill Industries. He oversees the state's first mattress-recycling program operated by Goodwill in Duluth. For each of the past two years, about 17,000 pieces have been processed there, largely drawn through partnerships with 10 counties and their waste management services. The Minneapolis operation, which charges a $15-per-mattress fee, has already partnered with Hennepin and McLeod counties, the cities of Coon Rapids and Anoka, delivery service Suntrax Logistics and furniture retailer Room & Board, all of which bring discarded mattresses to PPL.




Jewett expects more cooperation with counties and retailers as the program takes off. People can bring mattresses to waste drop-off sites and the municipalities will transport them to the recycling plant. The PPL plant will not accept dropoffs from individuals. Despite anticipated growth, there are still difficulties associated with the emerging industry, now in its infancy. "Some of the recycling markets have been challenging, but they slowly but surely overcome that," said Heidi Ringhofer, operations and maintenance supervisor for Western Lake Superior Sanitary District, who since its beginning in 2004 has been involved with the Duluth mattress-recycling operation. Still, overall the industry is a slow-growing one, Ringhofer said. That's partly because there's a limited number of mattresses discarded -- unlike the pervasive plastic bottles that people use and toss every day -- and partly because of the labor-intensive process of stripping mattresses of their many individual components, Ringhofer added.

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