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Four Counties Corner, Oklahoma

Unincorporated communities in Canadian County, OklahomaUnincorporated communities in Kingfisher County, OklahomaUnincorporated communities in Logan County, OklahomaUnincorporated communities in OklahomaUnincorporated communities in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
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FourCountiesCorner1
FourCountiesCorner1

Four Counties Corner is a suburban unincorporated community that is centered on the quad-point where four counties meet: Kingfisher, Logan, Oklahoma and Canadian. It is one of only two such county quad-points in the state of Oklahoma, and is also a public school district tri-point, with the districts of Deer Creek, Cashion, and Piedmont all meeting at this same corner.It was previously known as "Lockridge."

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Four Counties Corner, Oklahoma (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Four Counties Corner, Oklahoma
West Waterloo Road,

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Wikipedia: Four Counties Corner, OklahomaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.725936111111 ° E -97.673938888889 °
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Address

West Waterloo Road

West Waterloo Road
73025
Oklahoma, United States
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Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple
Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple is the 95th operating temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). It serves stakes in Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Kansas. The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple was announced on March 14, 1999, to be built on land purchased years earlier for the building of a meetinghouse, along with an additional parcel of land donated by the sellers. The additional land was originally used as a baseball field by local church members. The temple groundbreaking took place on July 3, 1999 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. When construction was completed, a public open house began on July 15, 2000 with over 40,000 visitors touring the temple in a seven-day period. James E. Faust, second counselor in the First Presidency, dedicated the temple on July 30, 2000. It was constructed at a cost of $4.5 million.The temple has a total floor area of 10,769 square feet (1,000.5 m2), two ordinance rooms, and two sealing rooms.On April 10, 2017, the LDS Church announced that the temple would close in October 2017 for renovations that would be completed in 2019. On January 16, 2019, the LDS Church announced that the temple would be rededicated on May 19, 2019. While the church originally announced there would be no open house, an update on 22 April indicated there would be an open house from April 24 to May 1, excluding Sunday. The temple was rededicated by Henry B. Eyring.In 2020, the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple was closed in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Quail Springs Mall

Quail Springs Mall is a super-regional shopping mall and trade area located in far northern Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, which opened on October 23, 1980. It contains three major department store anchors (originally had four anchor stores until 2016), a 24-screen AMC Theatre, Round One Entertainment, Blue Zoo Aquarium, and a total of 111 tenants comprising a total of approximately 1,115,000 square feet of gross leasable area. The mall is the focal point of a large area of recent residential and commercial development, and is located very close to one of Oklahoma City's most notoriously congested and difficult intersections which includes West Memorial Road, North Pennsylvania Avenue and The Kilpatrick Turnpike. Architect William Pereira designed the original building. The mall itself was built by DayJay Associates, a joint venture of J. C. Penney and The Center Companies, a division of the Dayton-Hudson Corporation (now Target Corporation). The mall underwent a multimillion-dollar renovation during 1998 that brought several exterior updates, completely redesigned the mall's interior style into an Oklahoma prairie theme, updated the lower-level food court to a 1950s drive-in design, plus added the 24-screen AMC Theatre adjacent to the food court. The mall's main anchors are Life Time Fitness, JCPenney, AMC Theatres, Round One Entertainment, Blue Zoo Aquarium, Von Maur, and Dillard's. Former anchors include Sears and Macy's (formerly Foley's). In late 2013 it was announced that Sears would be closing in early 2014 and Von Maur would be taking their place, in summer 2014 the store building was totally gutted to the structural frame and a brand-new interior-exterior installed, Von Maur opened in early 2015. In late 2015, it was announced that Macy's would close by February 2016 as part of the company's cut back and closing unprofitable store locations. In January 2017, it was announced that the former Macy's store building would be demolished and that Life Time Fitness would build a huge free standing 181,400-sq.-ft. complex in the former Macy's parking lot and the former store building spot would become a new parking lot for Life Time Fitness and the mall. Life Time Fitness opened in October 2018, the former Macy's store upper-level mall entrance is now just another direct entrance into the mall itself (along with the original direct mall entrance just Twenty feet away.) the ground floor-level of the former Macy's Store was totally gutted and filled in for the new parking lot.