Casablanca, Morocco Inaugurates its New Casa-port Train Station

Located in the heart of a city undergoing plenty of change, the new station (costing approximately 45 million USD), fits in perfectly with the the plans for the Casablanca urban area's recomposition, and the configuration of the urban space surrounding the station. It can be found in the center of several of the metro area's major roadways and neighboring the city's port, the new Marina, and the Hassan II Mosque.
The railway constructs built in Marrakech, Fes, and Tangier were designed to be intelligent, offering multiple services, and designed as places for living. Now the Casa-Port station wants to take things a step further as part of this concept, raising the station to a community space for customers and the public at large.
The Casa-Port Station, which stretches over a surface area of about 33,500 square meters, will welcome more than 20 million passengers a year, amounting to nearly 5,000 travelers every hour during peak times. It groups three spaces with complementary functions, including a building for travelers, an underground parking lot, and a building housing the ONCF services, which is located parallel to the nearby embankment. It is a megastructure that combines modern and traditional architecture with facilities and installations that meet international standards of security and quality of service.
As part of the new station's opening, redevelopment has moved on to existing railway infrastructure in order to optimize them for continued use, going hand-in-hand with traffic development. This work resulted in an additional cost of approximately 11 million USD.
What features in the interior of a structure, such as a train station, are conducive to human interaction and appropriation of the space?
Original article, originally published in French, here.
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