mattress orange county california

mattress orange county california

mattress online store uk

Mattress Orange County California

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We don't use a traditional furniture store model. We don't care a lot for expensive showrooms, salesmen trying to sell you what you don't need, and depending on where you buy, over-priced, low quality furniture. We would rather go to a place where we can pick out what we need with no hassles. We have sofas and love seats, beautiful dining room sets, bedroom sets, modern queen and king beds, kids furniture, accents and mattresses.. just about everything home, at warehouse prices. We have beautiful custom sofas and custom sectionals, made anyway you want. Your choice of style, fabric and seating. Kids furniture, want a no hassle, beautiful, twin bed or a kids bedroom set? We promise you, you won't find better value anywhere. Trundle beds or bunk beds, we make it simple to turn one bedroom into a space for two or for an easy sleep over. In summary, our store is the way we would want it if we were shopping for furniture. A no-hassle warehouse environment with great selection and friendly and helpful staff.




Browse our website, get an idea of what you want, then come down to our showroom to see for yourself. -Your Friends at Furnishing America Furnishing America is a furniture store centrally located in Orange County Ca, on the border of Irvine and Santa Ana, in the South Coast Plaza Metro Area at the 405 / 55 interchange. Every Component of our Environmentally Friendly Sustainable Mattresses are removable, replaceable and interchangable Personalized Sleep for Both Sleepers Reduce solid waste by 50% FIRMNESS ADJUSTABLE 60-NIGHT COMFORT GUARANTEE* Replace parts, not beds. Extend mattress end-of-life 2x-3x OUTSTANDINGVALUE, BUY FACTORY DIRECT A Store Would Need to Charge $2,800. You pay $1,288 (Qn) One SizeDoes Not Fit All Big, Small, Short or Tall. Sterling Personalized Sleep Silver Lining Series mattresses allow both sleepers to have a choice of firmness & support Sterling Sleep Systems makes mattresses and mattress components under its flagship American Pacific Plastic Fabricators.




Established in 1987, the company is a privately-owned domestic manufacturing company with 25 years experience making a wide range of specialized products. These products are used in medical, military, aerospace and consumer industries. Sterling/APPF, Inc. has a strong track record in product innovation and development. With an emphasis on environmentally-friendly, private-label hospitality industry beds, our Orange County- based company operates a modern 53,000 square foot facility in Garden Grove, California. Today we produce a full line of component-based innerspring and foam mattresses and component-based memory foam and latex luxury mattresses. Our innerspring and foam mattresses with detachable, interchangeable parts incorporate the most advanced technologies available. Our products are shipped to over 30 countries with our principal customer bases in Germany, Switzerland, Japan and the US. As far back as 1998, we were named "Manufacturer of the Year" by our industry. Sterling Sleep Systems leads the industry in innovation with several U.S. patents supporting exclusive design features of our various products.




Sterling Sleep Systems in the News: Please click on the links below to see our press releases: Modular Bed Allows Hoteliers to Swap out Damaged Sections Sterling Wins Award in 14th Annual IIDA/HD Product Design Competition Sterling's Modular Mattress Design Allows Hoteliers to Reduce, Reuse and Renew Luxe Hotel Rodeo Drive Select Sterling Mattresses for Hotel Renovation Sterling selected for Sustainable Suite Contest at 2010 HD Show Sterling Launches Instructional Video WATG and IDEO Design to show Sterling Imperial at upcoming HD Expo in Las VegasSterling Personalized Sleep Silver Lining Series mattresses allow both sleepers to have a choice of firmness & support California Mattress Retailers, Stores, Showrooms Unbiased Ratings, Review and Comparison Updated December 12, 2016 The following comparison includes many of the largest mattress retailers in California. Part 1 of 2 33 Northern CA stores free with $699 buy




free with $599+ buy, otherwise $50+ free with $787+ buy, otherwise $85+ up to 2 weeks+ up to 6 bus. 60-120 days, must keep 30 days 120 days, must keep 30 days Exch. and or Refund* $70 or more transport fee $85 transport & 15% restock fee Part 2 of 2 free with min. buy free with $599+ buy, other- wise $70+ free with $399+ buy not free for in-store buys, but free for online buys up to 6 days 30 days, must keep 14 60 days, must keep 30 days 60 or 120 days, must keep 30 days 100 days, must keep 30 days $75 transport fee & 20% restock fee $100 transport fee & 20% restock fee transport fee & 15% restock fee * To be eligible to use the return policy, a mattress protector must often be purchased at the time of order.Like so many bus benches, street sweeping signs, and abandoned TVs, discarded mattresses and box springs are a fixture of the Los Angeles street-scape. But a bill in the state legislature would force mattress retailers to recycle all mattresses.




When you buy a mattress, the recycling fee would be added to the cost. But today, what happens to mattresses that get picked up off the street, or by the crews that deliver your new one? KPCC's Kevin Ferguson has the answer. Most of the time, a mattress's life starts with metal. At a factory in Orange, dozens of mattress-shaped inner springs are tucked into shelves like giant wire books—I’m on a tour of Custom Comfort, a mattress manufacturer and retailer with about half a dozen stores in and around LA. Jeremy Solis, the director of operations, is my guide. "Inner springs in a mattress are really designed to create the difference between the firmness and softness of a mattress, not necessarily the quality," he says. "So they're gonna be the strongest thing in any mattress you buy." The springs are then upholstered, stuffed with cotton, and shot with a giant air powered staple gun to fasten everything on. All told, it takes just a couple hours to go from springs to bed.




Then the mattress is trucked to a store, and eventually, your bedroom. But if you're replacing an old mattress with a new one, where does the discarded mattress end up? Out With The Old? In his apartment in Santa Monica, Adam Rakunas has been waiting three hours. The company said Adam could expect his family's brand new, organic cotton and foam mattress to show up today between 9 and noon. In the living room, the old mattress waits. For Adam and his family, this has been a long time coming. They went to stores all over the city, laid on countless floor models, and then waited six weeks for their mattress to be made and delivered. And even though they've been married since 2004 and have a 3-year-old, Adam says this feels like one of their first grown up couple purchases; the mattress has been his wife's since 1993. "This was her first real bed after starting her job," says Rakunas. "And she brought it with her to Kuala Lumpur, and then to Singapore and then to L.A. and then to here, when we moved in together.




It’s been our bed for the past nine years. 20 years is a good time to use a mattress, and now I think it’s time for something new." Finally, a knock on the door. In come two deliverymen with the foam mattress in three pieces. They rush into the bedroom, tear off the plastic wrap and assemble the mattress. Adam signs a paper and they're gone. The whole process takes less than five minutes. But the deliverymen didn't pick up the old mattress—it’s still in the living room. Luckily, Adam’s family found a neighbor happy to take it. But say you bought a new mattress and you're stuck with the old one. You don't want to dump it on the street, looking sad, dirty and alone in the rain. So what do you do? Cora Jackson, spokesperson for Los Angeles' Department of Sanitation, says to call 311. "We offer a free service to the residents of Los Angeles and that is our bulky item pick up service," she says. "We will come and collect that mattress and arrange to pick it up as soon as possible.




Usually on the collection day that we already pick up your bin." And a trash truck will take your mattress to its final resting place: a landfill. The city says it hopes to start recycling mattresses soon, but that's under negotiation. Sometimes, the deliverymen will pick it up for you. Companies like Sears, Sit N Sleep, and Macys will deliver your new mattress and take your old one, sometimes for a small fee. Jeremy Solis says Custom Comfort does that, too. "Typically, what we do is we have a trailer outside," says Solis. "We store all the old mattresses in the trailer.  And we've got a guy that comes by and picks them up every night." Where Old Mattresses Get A Second Chance There’s a good chance your old mattress will end up in the capable hands of Don Franco. The president of Gateway Mattress company in Montebello, California. Standing in a huge outdoor storage yard with Franco, I point out the hundreds of mattresses we're surrounded by."There's thousands of mattresses out here.




All in storage, ready to either be stripped down, to be recycled, or to be rebuilt depending on the condition of the old bed." Gateway is the state's largest mattress refurbisher. For 53 years, it’s been turning old mattresses into new ones. This huge storage area is at least as large as a football field, and it's easy to imagine that nearly every old mattress in Los Angeles ends up here. Some look dirty, some as good as new, but they all go through the same tearing down and rebuilding process. Inside, Gateway looks a lot like a typical mattress factory, you'd only notice a difference at the end of the mattress' journey: "At that point, then it has to go through an oven, which runs for 205 degrees for an hour and a half," says Franco. "It takes all the impurities out of the bed. And we have six ovens that run roughly 16 hours a day, sanitizing these mattresses." The ovens, which kill bacteria and bugs, are a state requirement. They're off to places like discount stores, motels, or convalescent homes.




You probably already figured out the problem with mattress rebuilding: it's kind of an unsettling thought. Retailers won't admit they sell refurbished mattresses and because of that, it's hard to know what kind you're buying. An unmarked, tagless mattress could have come from a place like Gateway or an unlicensed refurbisher. If the state law requiring mattresses recycling passes, you'll probably see more mattresses end up at places like Blue Marble Materials, just a ten minute drive from Gateway in Commerce, run by Tchad Robinson. When a mattress arrives at a plant like Tchad's, instead of being rebuilt, it's taken apart piece by piece: the metal springs are melted down, the wood is turned into chips. Robinson says the possibilities are endless: "The polyurethane foam is a valuable material in there. The cotton that can come out of a mattress, is very valuable," he says. "The shoddy, which is sort of a thick dense wool, multicolored wool material that can be used for sound insulation, for thermal insulations, quite a few applications for that that, and also the outside cover."

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