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5 zany ideas aimed at making your Metro commute greater

The MetroGreater submissions period has closed, but not before the site collected over 1,300 suggestions for small-scale improvements.

Metro, you ain't that bad. (Photo by Tajha Chappellet-Lanier)

MetroGreater, Greater Greater Washington’s new website aimed at crowdsourcing ideas for small-scale improvements to Metro, closed submissions this past Friday. But before doing so, the site managed to collect more than 1,300 ideas for making our city’s transit system better.
Boy, did you deliver. Ideas on the site run the gamut from the tongue in cheek (rename Metro “Trainy McTrainface”) to suggestions clearly based on very individual experiences. There’s a decent amount of overlap — better signage for and enforcement of common courtesy rules, for example, seems to be something a lot of people are after.
Here are five wacky and/or wonderful ideas that caught our attention:

Now comes the part of the competition when a jury reads through all 1,300 submissions to pick five to 10 that meet all the criteria to be finalists. In the meantime, the public is free to comment on the suggestions already submitted. Remember — the idea that ultimately gets chosen must cost under $100,000 and be easy to implement and maintain.
What’s your favorite suggestion from MetroGreater? Tweet us to say what makes it so great.

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