Four Corners is a census-designated place (CDP) within the extraterritorial jurisdiction of Houston in Fort Bend County, Texas, United States.
[7] It is bordered to the north by the Mission Bend CDP and to the east, south, and west by small units of the city of Houston.
Journalist Jeannie Kever said that the community, once "isolated", had become "something bigger and harder to define, its aging small frame houses and mobile homes engulfed by the omnivorous spoils of growth.
Jeannie Kever of the Houston Chronicle said that "not all of the newcomers identify with the old neighborhood and its inhabitants, even those living just a block away.
Eschbach explained that "as a large minority middle class started to emerge, Fort Bend was virgin territory that all groups could move to.
"[6] Kever said that in previous eras, "Four Corners has always been a multicultural mashup, its residents united by poverty and an appreciation for life in the slow lane.
[6] As of 2011 the original section of Four Corners is serviced by a water system of the Fort Bend Freshwater Supply District No.
Newer areas have municipal utility districts, which provide sewer and water services.
Several years prior to 2011, residents of the original section formed the Fort Bend Freshwater Supply District No.
According to Carmen Martinez, the president of the supply district, work on a sewer system will start at a later point in 2011.
Elementary schools outside of the CDP serving sections of Four Corners include Drabek and Oyster Creek.
The park includes a community center, two pavilions, playground equipment, a regulation soccer and softball field, 1/2 mile walking track, and a volleyball court.