DALLAS - A home furnishings retailer, which recently filed for bankruptcy, has revealed the closure of 26 underperforming stores.  The Niles location is not one of them.

At Home, with 260 stores, including one at the Eastwood Complex in Niles, announced Monday that it has started a process called Chapter 11 bankruptcy to reorganize its finances and get rid of almost $2 billion in debt.

The initial closing list includes a store in Pittsburgh and in a dozen states.

Here is the list of 26 At Home stores slated for closure:

California:

1982 E 20th St, Chico

2200 Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa

26532 Towne Center Drive Suites A-B, Foothill Ranch

2900 N Bellflower Blvd, Long Beach

3795 E Foothills Blvd, Pasadena

8320 Delta Shores Circle S., Sacramento

750 Newhall Dr, San Jose

2505 El Camino Real, Tustin

Florida:

14585 Biscayne Blvd, North Miami

Illinois:

13180 S Cicero Avenue, Crestwood

5203 W War Memorial Dr, Peoria

Massachusetts:

300 Providence Highway, Dedham

571 Boston Turnpike, Shrewsbury

Minnesota:

2820 Hwy 63 South, Rochester

Montana:

905 S 24th Street W, Billings

New Jersey:

461 Route 10 East, Ledgewood

1361 NJ-35, Middletown Township

301 Nassau Park Blvd., Princeton

New York:

300 Baychester Ave, Bronx

6135 Junction Blvd, Rego Park

Pennsylvania:

720 Clairton Blvd, Pittsburgh

Virginia:

19460 Compass Creek Pkwy, Leesburg

8300 Sudley Rd., Manassas

Washington:

1001 E Sunset Drive, Bellingham

2530 Rudkin Road, Yakima

Wisconsin:

3201 North Mayfair Road, Wauwatosa

The company expects its ownership to shift to the banks and other lenders it owes money. This is part of a special agreement they've made.

At Home has a deal with most of its lenders, who hold over 95% of the company's debt. This agreement will also bring in $200 million in new money to help the company keep running smoothly during and after this financial overhaul.

Even with the bankruptcy filing, At Home says it plans to keep its remaining stores open. They've also secured a $600 million loan to make sure they have enough money to operate while they go through this court-supervised process.