What colour should our taxis be? Your entries

On Wednesday we launched a contest to come up with a new look for taxis after the National Transport Authority said they should…

On Wednesday we launched a contest to come up with a new look for taxis after the National Transport Authority said they should all be the same colour. Here are some of your ideas

Margaret Casey:

I’m standing alone on O’Connell Street

It’s cold and it’s wet and it’s grey

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But along the road comes a rainbow

And it brightens up my day

“Are ya righ’ there luv?” says my hero

As I slip along the back seat

And he starts to sort the world out

While I begin to feel my feet

“The weather’s bleedin’ gorgeous

We can always do with a shower

I was in A&E yesterday

In and out in an hour!”

“The Government’s doing a mighty job

Getting rid of all the debt!”

The rainbow effect has started

There’s hope for Ireland yet!

Nicky White:

I propose that the new taxi colours be the 2 Tone colours of black and white. Used by the musical movement of the same name in Britain in the late 1970s, they have obvious resonances with that economically bleak period and current-day Ireland. The most successful 2 Tone song titles and band names, such as Ghost Town, Gangsters and Madness, also seem relevant to Ireland. We don’t yet have any ghost towns but are well on the way with our ghost estates. More seriously, symbolically these colours may also help to defuse the racial tension in the industry right now.

Giles O’Reilly:

When Johnny Cash fell in love with Ireland, back in the early 1960s, legend has it that he coined the song Forty Shades of Green in the back of a taxi heading to Dublin airport, so it is only fitting that we respect Mr Cash’s brainwaves. The concept of 40 shades would mean that surely across the green spectrum there would still be a chance for taxi drivers to show their uniqueness while belonging to the same tribe.

Joe Phelan:

I propose that all taxis be painted a weak shade of yellow, to reflect the typical taxi driver’s jaundiced view of the world. The interior should be black, to reflect the despair felt by many punters at having to pay through the nose while listening to a familiar script about the woes of the taxi trade.

Sarah O’Farrell:

Turquoise is the colour of communication (taxi drivers like to talk) and clarity of thought (they need to know where they are going). It’s the colour of calm (handy in traffic jams). If you mix blue (the sea – we are an island) with green (Ireland itself) you get turquoise. Perfect.

James O’Keeffe:

Instead of having just one uniform colour, wouldn’t it be great if the taxi colour could change when you got into it, depending on your mood or disposition. So red equals I’m angry, don’t talk to me; white equals I’m gonna be good tonight and easy on the sauce; green equals I’ve had too much to drink, take me home; or maybe I’m just being ridiculous here . . . the colour should be a nice beige.

Lucy Monaghan:

GAA county colours could be used: Dublin a Greek blue with a white stripe from bumper to bumper over the roof; Cork could be red with a white stripe; Galway wine with a white stripe; and so on. This colour system would prevent fly-by-nights and encroachment by unauthorised cars from outside the designated area. The taxi registration (permit) number should be printed on the roof to facilitate aerial recognition.

Stephen Walsh:

What colour should our taxis be?

Not brown – for that’s too hard to see

Not yellow – that’s just for the Yanks

And red, white and blue – I’d say no thanks

Cream gets too dirty – too hard to keep clean

And it would be far too Oirish to paint

them green

Purple’s out of fashion and grey is too cold

And we simply can’t afford silver or gold

No if we want to welcome the Celtic

Tiger back

Why not paint them in stripes – coloured orange and black?

Kay Hegarty:

A taxi to me

should be easy to see

Therefore yellow, no other

is the optimist’s colour

So we hope it will come

as we wait by the phone

And we hope that our journey

is pleasant and cheery

Hope also the vehicle

is clean and accessible

That music stays low

and the windows don’t blow

And that when we arrive

fresh from our pleasant drive

Hope to scrape enough cash

to hand over and dash

And the winner is..... Joe Smith

Irish taxis should, I think,

Be painted candy-apple pink.

Eye-catching, day and night;

Pink’s a colour that will excite.

Taxis would be efficient and fun,

A transport of joy for everyone,

Young old, tourist Paddy

Lad or lassie, Mammy or Daddy.

Pink is not a colour of choice

(except for Barbie and Mick Wallace)

So this colour revolution

Would also eliminate confusion.

Some may laugh, some may jeer;

Some may even think it queer

To use such a vivid cab as link

But all users can say they’re “in the pink”

Mr Smith wins a €100 book voucher