πComplete Gallery of 2025 Parking Spaces
As summer settles in and the school grounds quiet down, one of the most noticeable changes at Wylie High is the once-bustling senior parking lotβnow still, yet vividly alive with color. For the Class of 2025, the lot wasnβt just a place to park. It was a canvas of creativity, identity, and farewell.
Each space told a storyβsome lighthearted, some nostalgic, and all deeply personal. From vibrant tributes to Minions, Whataburger, and the movie Step Brothers, to hand-painted nods to hobbies, hopes, and inside jokes, these parking spots became senior year signaturesβsmall pieces of the students who made them.
But now, those painted squares sit empty.
Because those seniors donβt need them anymore.
Their engines have started, and theyβve shifted into the next gearβsome toward reserved spots at universities, others aiming for corporate garages, job sites, or wherever their new journey parks them next. The lot may feel quieter, but itβs not forgotten. It holds the joyful residue of honking horns on a Friday morning, quick coffee runs, and the last bell of high school dismissal.
In many ways, a parking lot is the perfect metaphor for this moment in life.
Itβs where you pause before moving forward.
Itβs where you choose a space, but youβre never meant to stay.
Itβs where arrivals and departures meet in the middle of everyday moments.
We miss seeing those spots full, buzzing with anticipation and teenage playlists. But we know those same students now carry their storiesβand that same spiritβinto new places, filling new lots with new purpose.
And soon, itβll be time for a new class to pick their place, grab a brush, and paint what matters to them. Because at Wylie, every space mattersβand every Bulldog leaves a mark.










