Lajja Mistry stands amidst inflatables with colorful video projections mapped onto them.
Lajja Mistry visits the "after school" exhibit at Carnegie Museum of Art Thursday, Oct. 2, 2025 (DS Fleegle/Pittsburgh's Public Source)

For over a year, Pittsburgh Public Schools has juggled proposals, delays and updates to a Future-Ready Facilities Plan that would close 12 schools and nine buildings across the city. As the district approaches a final vote, a current exhibition at the Carnegie Museum of Art reveals a long history of school closures and displacement in Pittsburgh. 

On display in the Heinz Architectural Center, “after school” blends contemporary artistic practices with case studies from Pittsburgh schools. The exhibit is approached through Pittsburgh’s archives, outlined by architectural renderings, photographs and headlines alongside immersive spaces. The closures of Schenley High, Northview Heights Elementary, Burgwin Elementary and Peabody High pepper the history of a city grappling with segregation, urban renewal, depopulation and growing privatization.

The curatorial team, consisting of Theodossis Issaias, Alyssa Velazquez and curatorial fellow McKenzie Stupica, consulted with Public Source K-12 Education Reporter Lajja Mistry about her extensive reporting on proposed PPS closures and invited her to submit an article that will be published in a companion book for the exhibition on Nov. 13.


Dig Deeper into Lajja’s reporting on PPS School Closures


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DS Fleegle is the audience growth and engagement producer at Pittsburgh’s Public Source, where he specializes in translating complex stories into accessible, impactful content across digital platforms....

Lajja is the K-12 education reporter at Pittsburgh's Public Source. Originally from India, she moved to the States in 2021 to pursue a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Southern California....