Register to Vote for the 2025 November General Election
October 15 – October 25, 2025 All Day
East Hall Annex, room 007, 215 Ryerson St, Brooklyn, NY 11205

A Critical Conversations Event
The 2025 November general election is taking place on Tuesday, November 4. NYC voters will determine who is elected mayor, city comptroller, public advocate, borough president, city council members, and more. For American citizens who are eligible to vote, we encourage you to take a moment to register to ensure that your voice is heard in this important election. You can register to vote on or before Saturday, October 25. You can register on Pratt’s Brooklyn campus with Pratt’s New York Public Interest Research Group (NYPIRG). The NYPIRG office is located in East Hall Annex, room 007, and accepts drop-in meetings, or you can schedule a meeting by contacting nypirg@pratt.edu. Additionally, you can register to vote online at Vote.org. Early voting will occur from Saturday, October 25, 2025, until Sunday, November 2, 2025. For community members registering to vote using your on-campus address, your early voting site is Brooklyn Masonic Temple, 317 Clermont Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11205, and your Election Day voting site is PS 270, 241 Emerson Place, Brooklyn, NY 11205. If you plan to vote by mail in your home state, the vote-by-mail application deadline (online and by mail) is Saturday, October 25, 2025. To find your polling site and a sample ballot, check out your Board of Elections website.
Regardless of your voting eligibility, we invite you to remain civically engaged by participating in various discussions and events organized by the Pratt Institute community that aim to foster dialogue on cultural contexts, activism, civil discourse, and academic engagement. Review ongoing events and resources on Pratt’s Critical Conversations web page or on Engage.
For those interested in exploring resources on ways to get involved with community action, please refer to the Pratt Civic Engagement LibGuide created by Elijah Spiegel, MSLIS ’25.
This event is part of Critical Conversations: creating space for and educating one another about our multiple cultural contexts, activism, civil discourse, and academic engagement.