I arrived at the Tanger Ville Railway Station in the northern coastal city of Tangier about a half hour before my train at 5 p.m.
Though the station opened in 2003 with regular rail, Morocco spent $37 million to renovate it and add a new building for a new high-speed train system.
Source: Morocco World News
While Morocco already has an extensive rail network that serves 40 million passengers, the country has been developing high-speed rail for a decade.
The $2.3 billion project has been funded with nearly a billion dollars from France and half a billion from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE.
The first leg of the project, spanning from Tangier to Casablanca, Morocco's business hub, opened in November.
Plans are underway to extend the line to tourist hotspots Marrakech and Agadir in the next few years, and eventually Fez.
Source: Morocco World News, CNN,The Guardian
Many analysts have suggested that the bullet train is about more than the revenue it will generate, but rather "a flagship project that enables Morocco to shine in Africa," as one geopolitical analyst told The Guardian.
The spotless, light-filled Tanger Ville station sends the message that the train is as much about "prestige" as anything else.
Source: The Guardian
As I've observed with the high-speed rail stations in China, the Tanger Ville station looks more akin to an airport than a train station. There are high-end shops, a cafeteria, and even a first-class lounge.
It's important to remember that the bullet train is far from the only big-ticket infrastructure project the Moroccan government has invested in. Over the last decade, the country has developed numerous ports and a $600 million solar plant considered the biggest in the world.
Source: CNN, CNN
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBuying a ticket is very easy. You can buy them online from ONCF, the Moroccan train authority, or in the station.
Fares for the high-speed train are about 30% higher than on a regular train, which costs between $14 and $27.
Source: ONCF, Travel + Leisure
A helpful sign tells you all the train times for both regular and high-speed trains.
All trains leaving Tangier pass through Tanger Ville station, so you don't want to buy tickets for the wrong one. A ride from Tangier to Casablanca on the regular train is a whopping five or six hours.
The machines are easy enough to use. Anyone who has visited a major city and used the metro system can figure it out. It accepts cash and credit cards.
Depending on the time, high-speed fares range from $15 to $24 for a second-class ticket and $25 to $38 for a first-class ticket.
Source: Morocco World News
I got a first-class ticket for $25.
Stop TGV, a local coalition that has protested the project, has said the fares are a third of what they would need to be for Morocco to pay back its loans to its international partners.
But Mohamed Rabie Khlie, the director general of ONCF, has said that is important that the train be able to serve all Moroccans and not just "a high-end clientele." Keeping costs down is a major part of that.
Source: The Guardian, Stop TGV, Le Monde
After getting my ticket, I headed to the Al Boraq lounge, for people traveling on the high-speed train.
Morocco's King, Mohammed VI, named the high-speed train Al Boraq, after a mythical winged horse in Islamic culture.
Source: Maroc
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe lounge was nice, but packed. The downstairs was filled with people and no seats were available.
One of the worries from analysts is that the high-speed train will not be able to get enough passengers to become profitable. Rabie Khlie has said that the rail will need to double its volume to 6 million passengers annually within three years of operation.
Source: Le Monde
At least there was plenty of free coffee, tea, and hot chocolate.
I made myself a hot chocolate and began looking for a place to sit for a few minutes.
Thankfully, there was an upstairs.
Ait Benhamou told CNN that in the event the high-speed rail doesn't reach 6 million passengers annually within three years, the government will have to give out subsidies.
Source: CNN
The vibe of the Al Boraq Lounge is very tech co-working space circa 2016.
One of the hopes of the government is that the high-speed train will encourage foreign investment in the country and convince global business leaders that Morocco is an attractive place for development.
During about a month in the country, the Al Boraq lounge was one of the few places that I found working public Wi-Fi.
The Tanger Ville station can feel worlds away from parts of Morocco, like the undeveloped rural interior of the country.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIt's understandable why the railway has infuriated people like those in charge of the Stop TGV campaign and politicians like Omar El Hyani, a Rabat city councillor, and Omar Balafraj, a member of parliament for the Federation of the Democratic Left party.
To critics like Balafraj, the railway is an expensive project that is big and loud, but does little to help everyday Moroccans. "Morocco is a poor country and the top priority should be education," Balafraj told CNN.
As a voice over the intercom informed me and the other passengers that the train was ready to board, I headed out to the platform.
The truth is the project does have the support of many Moroccans, a point that even critics concede. El Hyani told CNN that “In Morocco, when you present people with a fancy new idea, they tend to agree with it," though he added that this phenomenon is due in part to skillful propaganda.
Source: CNN
There's a sign that lets you know if you are at the correct platform.
Once I found that I rushed down the concourse to find the first-class car.
It's easy to be dismissive about the prestige factor, but I saw the excitement on Moroccan passengers first-hand, as many took selfies of themselves in front of the train.
As Hassan, an IT worker in Tangier, told Morocco World News shortly after the opening, “Those who say that it is all about prestige are right. But they are missing something important: Prestige counts for an emerging country that aspires to greatness, to big development plans.”
Source: Morocco World News
Because I'm a bit of a worrywart, I double-checked the other sign above the train to make sure I was getting on the right one.
I didn't want to end up in Fez.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAs I walked, I made a mental note of the cafeteria car.
Unlike the trains of old, most high-speed trains don't have a traditional dining car. Instead, they have a cafeteria car that sells a few snacks like sodas and sandwiches. The one exception was the bullet train in Russia, which had full meals.
The first-class car was at the end of the train. I almost went into the wrong car a few times.
Morocco's high-speed trains are French-made double-decker cars made by Alstom, which manufactures high-speed rail systems for countries all around the world. Still, the feeling among some Moroccans is that the French company got a "sweetheart deal" because of France's colonial history with Morocco.
Source: The Guardian
As I walked into the first-class cabin, I was struck by the fact that the interiors looked distinctly Moroccan.
The seats are covered in a rich red fabric.
There's a large set of racks to stow your luggage.
Much better than keeping it underfoot or on my lap.
One thing that I enjoyed about the Moroccan TGV is that the design had an old-school flair that integrated classic elements like the art-deco lamps and seats that face each other.
It was classic and modern at the same time.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdNot all the rows were double rows that faced each other. But I happened to be in one.
The benefit was that I had extra leg room. The downside was that I had to negotiate with the person across from me for the space.
Each seat reclined via a motorized switch. It was a little jarring at first.
Pressing the button opens the seat part so you can extend your legs, while also reclining the back section.
Each row had a privacy shade to block out the sun.
It was very needed during my sunset train ride, where direct sunlight shined into the compartment as we rode down the Atlantic Coast.
There were a couple of hooks on each row so you could hang your jacket.
For anyone thinking that Morocco is warm year-round, fair warning: The winter is bone-chilling cold.
Each row had a power outlet so I could plug in my laptop. But there seemed to be only one power outlet per row.
So if you get unlucky, you'll have to make friends with your neighbor.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe tray table on the double rows folds out for each person. It's a much roomier table than you'd typically get from a seat-back on an airplane.
There's plenty of room to spread out and work.
With no stops until Kenitra, 128 miles to the south of Tangier and almost all the way to the capital of Rabat, the train quickly picks up speed.
The landscape blowing by is sea and beaches on one side and rolling green hills and pine forests on the other.
The high speed train to Casablanca currently takes about 2 hours and 10 minutes, less than half the time it takes on a regular train.
After about a year or so of track improvements, that time will be cut to a blazing 90 minutes.
Source: Herald Live
After getting settled in, I took a walk through the train to get a feel for what the other compartments look like.
To be honest, second-class looked little different from first class. The seats were leather (or fake leather) and not as plush, but otherwise, I couldn't see a difference.
The second-class compartments are closer to the cafeteria car as well.
I had to pass through three or four cars to get to it.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe menu is nothing to write home about. A mix of sandwiches, coffees, pastries, and snacks.
But with the longest ride on the train currently topping out at a little over two hours, it makes sense that it wouldn't be more elaborate. I'm sure most people will wait to eat a real meal.
I bought a bag of chips and took a moment to take in the landscape as it blew by.
The landscape was passing almost too quickly for my camera.
By then, the train had sped to its top speed of 320 km/h (200 mph).
That's a lot faster than Amtrak's Acela Express, currently the fastest train in the US with a speed up to 214 km/h (150 mph).
The cafeteria car had a retro futuristic vibe with its curved ceilings, wavy bar table, and colorful stools.
It reminded me of what people imagined the future would be like in the 1960s.
After finishing my bag of chips, I headed back to my car for the remaining hour or so of the ride.
Each car is separated by these automatic doors. You press a button to open them.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdYou could definitely feel the higher speed, though it's probably a credit to the engineering that I didn't feel it too much.
I only really noticed the speed when I looked out the window and saw the scenery whizzing by. The scenery in Morocco never stops being stunning. To be honest, it wouldn't be so bad to take the slow train.
The bathroom, though new, didn't seem well-kept. This was the bathroom for the first-class cabin, with rust already forming around the sink and soap spilling out of the dispenser.
The other bathrooms must've looked worse.
With a two-hour train, the ride goes by quick. Before I knew it, we had passed Rabat and were just a few minutes away from the end of our journey at Casablanca.
Having done many day-long car trips all over Morocco over the previous month, I can't wait until they extend the service to major tourist hubs like Agadir and Marrakech.
Though the train's Moroccan critics have a point about public resources being put into a shiny bauble, it's hard to ignore how well such developments have worked out for similar developing countries.
China, famously, has facilitated much of its development with its ultrafast rail network. Russia and soon India, are aiming to do the same thing.
Whether it works out will largely depend on if foreign investors buy what Morocco is selling and, more crucially, if Moroccans use the train as much as the ONCF is projecting they will.
The train comes into the Casa Voyageurs station, the primary train station in Casablanca.
While it has been open since 1923, Morocco recently renovated the station for $47 million to upgrade it to be ready for the high-speed train.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe Casa Voyageurs station looks just as snazzy as the Tanger Ville Station.
While it will take some time for Morocco and the global cabal of analysts to decide whether or not the high-speed rail project is a success economically, from a tourist's perspective, the experience couldn't have been better.
As I always feel after riding a bullet train, whether in Korea, China, Russia, or Morocco, I wondered why the US can't execute such large projects. But one thing I've learned is that these projects usually happen in countries where ruling parties can make decisions without public debate.
That's what happened in Morocco, too. As Balafrej told The New York Times in 2012, the train "is the very symbol of Morocco that we do not want. This Morocco, where the most important decisions ... are taken without consultation or democratic and public debate."