As it's just the amp that's producing the hum, and not your other gear (i.e. your audio interface), and given that the amp performs better elsewhere, that leaves the circuit that you amplifier's plugged into as the probable culprit.
There are two possibilities. One is that the circuit is improperly wired, the other is that there is something else connected to the same circuit that's injecting noise into the line, such as a refrigerator.
If the problem hasn't always been there, and just recently began, you can probably eliminate the first possibility. You can confirm that by taking the amp to another part of the house and plugging it into a different circuit. Just make sure it's really a separate circuit - you could make sure by turning off the outlet you normally use via the circuit breaker.
If the problem has always been there, then it's likely the circuit is not wired correctly. Your electrician should be able to test that easily if he has the proper equipment. Have him verify that three wires are coming to the outlet and that the ground wire is connected. He may have a tester that can indicate whether the ground wire is too short, i.e. daisy-chained to another outlet as opposed to running all the way back to the neutral-ground bond in the service panel.
If all else fails, you can get an isolation transformer. In many ways, that's the ideal solution. Get one hefty enough to handle all of your audio equipment and plug everything into it. That'll solve all grounding issues and most EMI issues, and many RFI issues.