Havana ( , : [la aˈβana],
officially Ciudad de La Habana,) is the capital city, major port, and leading
commercial centre of Cuba
. The
city is one of the 14
Cuban
provinces.
The city/province has 2.4 million
inhabitants, and the urban area over 3.7 million, making Havana the
largest city in both Cuba and the Caribbean region
. The city extends mostly westward and
southward from the bay, which is entered through a narrow inlet and
which divides into three main harbours: Marimelena, Guanabacoa, and
Atarés.
The sluggish Almendares River
traverses the city from south to north, entering
the Straits of
Florida
a few miles west of the bay. In 1959 the
city halted its growth, and since then has suffered a net loss of
living units, despite its population increase.
King
Philip II of Spain granted Havana
the title of City in 1592 and a royal decree in 1634 recognized its
importance by officially designated as the "Key to the New World and Rampart of the West Indies
". Havana's coat of arms carries this
inscription.
The Spaniards began building fortifications,
and in 1553 they transferred the governor's residence to Havana
from Santiago de
Cuba
on the eastern end of the island, thus making
Havana the de facto capital. The
importance of harbour fortifications was early recognized as
English, French, and Dutch sea marauders attacked the city in the
16th century. The sinking of the
U.S.
battleship Maine in Havana's harbor in 1898 was the
immediate cause of the
Spanish-American War.
Present day Havana is the center of the
Cuban government, and various ministries
and headquarters of businesses are based there.
History
The founding of Havana
The current Havana area and its natural bay were first visited by
Europeans during
Sebastián de
Ocampo's circumnavigation of the island in 1509.
Shortly thereafter, in
1510, the first Spanish colonists arrived
from Hispaniola
and began the conquest of Cuba.
Conquistador Diego Velázquez de
Cuéllar founded Havana on August 25, 1515 on the southern coast
of the island, near the present town of Surgidero de
Batabanó
. Between 1514 and 1519, the city had at
least two different establishments. All attempts to found a city on
Cuba's south coast failed. The city's location was adjacent to a
superb harbor at the entrance to the Gulf of Mexico, and with easy
access to the Gulf Stream, the main ocean current that navigators
followed when traveling from the
Americas
to Europe. This location led to Havana’s early development as the
principal port of Spain's New World colonies. An early map of Cuba
drawn in 1514 places the town at the mouth of the river Onicaxinal,
also on the south coast of Cuba. Another establishment was
La
Chorrera, today in the neighborhood of
Puentes Grandes, next to the Almendares
River.

Paseo del Prado
The final
establishment, commemorated by El Templete
, was the sixth town founded by the Spanish on the
island, called San Cristóbal de la Habana by Pánfilo de Narváez: the name
combines San Cristóbal, patron
saint of Havana, and Habana, of obscure origin,
possibly derived from Habaguanex, a native American chief
who controlled that area, as mentioned by Diego Velasquez in his
report to the king of Spain. A legend relates that
Habana was the name of Habaguanex's beautiful daughter,
but no known historical source corroborates this version.
Havana moved to its current location next to what was then called
Puerto de Carenas (literally, "
Careening Bay"), in 1519. The quality of this
natural bay, which now hosts Havana's harbor, warranted this change
of location.
Bartolomé de
las Casas wrote:
...one of the ships, or both, had the need of
careening, which is to renew or mend the parts that travel under
the water, and to put tar and wax in them, and entered the port we
now call Havana, and there they careened so the port was called
de Carenas. This bay is very good and can host many ships,
which I visited few years after the Discovery... few are in Spain,
or elsewhere in the world, that are their equal...
Shortly after the founding of Cuba's first cities, the island
served as little more than a base for the
Conquista of
other lands.
Hernán
Cortés organized his expedition to Mexico
from the
island. Cuba, during the first years of the Discovery,
provided no immediate wealth to the
conquistadores, as it was poor in
gold,
silver and
precious stones, and many of its settlers
moved to the more promising lands of Mexico and South America that
were being discovered and colonized at the time. The legends of
Eldorado and the
Seven Cities of Gold attracted
many adventurers from Spain, and also from the adjacent colonies,
leaving Havana and the rest of Cuba largely unpopulated.
Pirates and La Flota
Havana was originally a trading port, and suffered regular attacks
by
buccaneers,
pirates, and French
corsairs.
The first attack and resultant burning of the city was by the
French corsair
Jacques de Sores in
1555. The pirate took Havana easily, plundering the city and
burning much of it to the ground. De Sores left without obtaining
the enormous wealth he was hoping to find in Havana.
Such attacks
convinced the Spanish Crown to fund the construction of the first
fortresses in the main cities — not only to counteract the pirates
and corsairs, but also to exert more control over commerce with the
West Indies, and to limit the extensive contrabando
(black market) that had arisen due to
the trade restrictions imposed by the Casa de Contratación of
Seville
(the crown-controlled trading house that held a
monopoly on New World trade).
To counteract pirate attacks on
galleon
convoys headed for Spain while loaded with New World treasures, the
Spanish crown decided to protect its ships by concentrating them in
one large fleet, which would traverse the Atlantic Ocean as a
group. A single merchant fleet could more easily be protected by
the Spanish
Armada. Following a royal decree
in 1561, all ships headed for Spain were required to assemble this
fleet in the Havana Bay. Ships arrived from May through August,
waiting for the best weather conditions, and together, the fleet
departed Havana for Spain by September.
This naturally boosted commerce and development of the adjacent
city of Havana (a humble
villa at the time).
Goods traded in
Havana included gold, silver, alpaca wool from the Andes, emeralds from Colombia
, mahoganies from Cuba and
Guatemala
, leather from the Guajira,
spices, sticks of dye from
Campeche
, corn, manioc, and cocoa. Ships
from all over the New World carried products first to Havana, in
order to be taken by the fleet to Spain. The thousands of ships
gathered in the city's bay also fueled Havana's agriculture and
manufacture, since they had to be supplied with food, water, and
other products needed to traverse the ocean. In 1563, the
Capitán General (the Spanish Governor of the island) moved
his residence from Santiago de Cuba to Havana, by reason of that
city's newly gained wealth and importance, thus unofficially
sanctioning its status as capital of the island.
On December 20, 1592, King Philip II of Spain granted Havana the
title of City. Later on, the city would be officially designated as
"Key to the New World and Rampart of the West Indies" by the
Spanish crown. In the meantime, efforts to build or improve the
defensive infrastructures of the city continued.
The San Salvador
de la Punta
castle guarded the west entrance of the bay, while
the Castillo de los Tres Reyes Magos del
Morro
guarded the eastern entrance. The Castillo de
la Real Fuerza
defended the city's center, and doubled as the
Governor's residence until a more comfortable palace was
built. Two other defensive towers, La Chorrera and
San Lázaro were also built in this period.
17th-18th Centuries
Havana expanded greatly in the 17th century.
New buildings were
constructed from the most abundant materials of the island, mainly
wood, combining various Iberian
architectural styles, as well as borrowing
profusely from Canarian
characteristics. During this period the city
also built civic monuments and religious constructions. The convent
of St Augustin, El Morro Castle, the chapel of the Humilladero, the
fountain of Dorotea de la Luna in La Chorrera, the church of the
Holy Angel, the hospital of San Lazaro, the monastery of Santa
Teresa and the convent of San Felipe Neri were all completed in
this era.
In 1649 a
fatal epidemic brought from Cartagena
in Colombia, affected a third of the population of
Havana. On November 30, 1665, Queen Mariana of Austria, widow of King
Philip IV of Spain, ratified the
heraldic shield of Cuba, which took as its symbolic motifs the first three castles of Havana: the Real
Fuerza, the Tres Santos Reyes Magos del
Morro
and San Salvador de la Punta. The shield
also displayed a symbolic golden key to represent the title "Key to
the Gulf". On 1674, the works for the City Walls were started, as
part of the fortification efforts. They would be completed by
1740.
By the
middle of the 18th century Havana had more than seventy thousand
inhabitants, and was the third largest city in the Americas,
ranking behind Lima
and Mexico City
but ahead of Boston
and New York
.
British occupation
The city
was captured by the British
during the Seven Years'
War. The episode began on June 6, 1762, when at dawn, a
British fleet, comprising more than 50 ships and a combined force
of over 11,000 men of the
Royal Navy and
Army, sailed into Cuban waters and made an amphibious landing east
of Havana. The invaders seized the heights known as La Cabaña on
the east side of the harbor and commenced a bombardment of nearby
El Morro Castle, as well as the city itself. After a two month
siege, El Morro was
attacked and taken on 30
July 1762. The city formally surrendered on 13 August. It was
subsequently governed by Sir
George Keppel on behalf
of Great Britain. Although the British only lost 560 men to combat
injuries during the siege, more than half their forces ultimately
died due to illness,
yellow fever in
particular.
The British immediately opened up trade with their
North American and Caribbean colonies,
causing a rapid transformation of Cuban society. Food, horses and
other goods flooded into the city, and thousands of slaves from
West Africa were transported to the
island to work on the undermanned sugar plantations. Though Havana,
which had become the third largest city in the new world, was to
enter an era of sustained development and strengthening ties with
North America, the British occupation was not to last.
Pressure from
London
by sugar
merchants fearing a decline in sugar prices forced a series of
negotiations with the Spanish over colonial territories.
Less than a year after Havana was seized, the
Peace of Paris was signed by the
three warring powers thus ending the Seven Years' War. The treaty
gave Britain
Florida in exchange for
Cuba on the recommendation of the French, who advised that
declining the offer could result in Spain losing Mexico and much of
the
South American mainland to the
British.

Paseo del Prado leading to Parque
Central
After regaining the city, the Spanish transformed Havana into the
most heavily fortified city in the Americas.
Construction began on
what was to become the Fortress of San Carlos de la Cabaña
, the biggest Spanish fortification in the New
World. The work extended for eleven years and was enormously
costly, but on completion the fort was considered an unassailable
bastion and essential to Havana's defence.
It was provided with
a large number of cannons forged in Barcelona
. Other fortifications were constructed, as
well: the castle of
Atarés defended the
Shipyard in the inner bay, while the castle of
El Príncipe guarded the city from the west. Several cannon
batteries located along the bay's
canal (among
them the
San Nazario and
Doce Apóstoles
batteries) ensured that no place in the harbor remained
undefended.
The
Havana
cathedral
was constructed in 1748 as a Jesuit church, and converted in 1777 into the
Parroquial Mayor church, after the Suppression of the Jesuits in
Spanish territory in 1767. In 1788, it formally became a
Cathedral. Between 1789 and 1790 Cuba was apportioned into an
individual
diocese
by the
Roman Catholic Church.
On
January 15, 1796, the remains of Christopher Columbus were transported
to the island from Santo
Domingo
. They rested here until 1898, when they were
transferred to Seville's
Cathedral
, after Spain's loss of Cuba.
Havana's shipyard (named
El
Arsenal) was extremely active, thanks to the lumber resources
available in the vicinity of the city. The
Santísima Trinidad
was the largest warship of her time. Launched in 1769, she was
about 62 meters long, had three decks and 120 cannons. She was
later upgraded to as many as 144 cannons and four decks.
She sank
following the Battle of
Trafalgar
in 1805. This ship cost 40.000
pesos
fuertes of the time, which gives an idea of the importance of
the Arsenal, by comparing its cost to the 26 million
pesos
fuertes and 109 ships produced during the Arsenal's
existence.
19th Century
As trade between Caribbean and North American states increased in
the early 19th century, Havana became a flourishing and fashionable
city. Havana's theaters featured the most distinguished actors of
the age, and prosperity amongst the burgeoning middle-class led to
expensive new classical mansions being erected.
During this period
Havana became known as the Paris
of the
Antilles.
The 19th century opened with the arrival in Havana of
Alexander von Humboldt, who was
impressed by the vitality of the port.
In 1837, the first
railroad was constructed, a 51 km stretch between Havana and
Bejucal
, which was used for transporting sugar from the valley of Guinness to the
harbor. With this, Cuba became the fifth country in the
world to have a railroad, and the first
Spanish-speaking country.
Throughout the
century, Havana was enriched by the construction of additional
cultural facilities, such as the Tacon Teatre
, one of the most luxurious in the world, the
Artistic and Literary Liceo (Lyceum) and the theater
Coliseo.
In 1863, the city walls were knocked down so that the
metropolis could be enlarged.
At the end of the
century, the well-off classes moved to the quarter of Vedado
.
Later,
they emigrated towards Miramar
, and today, evermore to the west, they have settled
in Siboney. At the end of the
19th century, Havana witnessed the final moments of Spanish
colonialism in America, which ended definitively when the United
States warship
Maine was sunk in its port, giving that
country the pretext to invade the island. The 20th century began
with Havana, and therefore Cuba, under occupation by the USA. In
1906 the
Bank of Nova Scotia
opened the first branch in Havana. By 1931 it had three branches in
Havana.
Republican period and Post-revolution
During the Republican Period, from 1902 to 1959, the city saw a new
era of development. All endeavors of industry and commerce grew
very rapidly. Cuba recovered from the devastation of war to become
a well-off country, with the third largest middle class in the
hemisphere, and Havana, the Capital of the country, became know as
the Paris of the Caribbean.Construction was an important industry.
Apartment buildings to accommodate the new middle class, as well as
mansions for the Cuban tycoons, were built at a fast pace.
Numerous
luxury hotels, casinos and nightclubs were constructed during the
1930s to serve Havana's burgeoning tourist industry, strongly
rivaling Miami
. In
the thirties, organized crime characters were not unaware of
Havana's nightclub and casino life, and they made their inroads in
the city.
Santo
Trafficante, Jr. took the roulette wheel at the Sans Souci, Meyer Lansky directed the Hotel Habana Riviera, Lucky Luciano, the Hotel
Nacional
Casino, and the Havana Hilton
owned by the Hospitality Workers Retirement Fund
was Latin America's tallest, largest hotel. At the time
Havana became an exotic capital of appeal and numerous activities
ranging from marinas, grand prix car racing, musical shows and
parks.The spectacular development and opportunity offered by Cuba
in general and Havana in particular, made the island a magnet for
immigration. Cuba received millions of immigrants from all corners
of the world during the Republic. It received so many Spaniards,
that today it is estimated that one quarter of the Cuban population
descends from Spanish immigrants.
Havana achieved the title of being the
Latin American city with the biggest middle
class population per-capita simultaneously accompanied by gambling
and corruption where gangsters and stars were known to mix
socially.
During this era, Havana was generally
producing more revenue than Las Vegas
, Nevada
. A
gallery of black and white portraits from the era still adorn the
walls of the bar at the Hotel National, including pictures of
Frank Sinatra with
Ava Gardner,
Marlene
Dietrich and
Gary Cooper. In 1958,
about 300,000 American tourists visited the city.
One of the most
well-known visitors and resident to the area was the American
author Ernest Hemingway
(1899-1961), who quoted "in terms of beauty, only Venice
and Paris
surpassed Havana", Hemingway wrote several of his famous
novels in Cuba and lived there the last 22 years of his
life. Havana had 135 cinemas at that time — more
than Paris
or New York City
.
After the
revolution of 1959, the communists (who had denied being communist
up to that point) promised to improve social services, public
housing, and official buildings; nevertheless, shortages that
affected Cuba after Castro's abrupt expropriation of all private
property and industry under a strong communist model backed by the
Soviet
Union
followed by the U.S. embargo, hit Havana
especially hard. As a result, today much of Havana is in a
dilapidated state. By 1966-68, the Cuban government had
nationalized all privately owned business
entities in Cuba, down to "certain kinds of small retail forms of
commerce" (law No. 1076 ). Most of these laws and economic
restrictions still remain today.Havana and Cuba in general
transformed from an immigrant receiver, to one the largest
emigration generators in the world. Today almost 15% of the total
Cuban population lives abroad, even despite the fact that free
travel is banned by the regime.
There was a severe economic downturn after the collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991 and with it the end of the billions of dollars
in subsidies the Soviet Union gave the Cuban government, with many
believing Havana's soviet backed regime would soon vanish, as it
happened to the Soviet
satellite
states of
Eastern Europe.
However, contrary to the soviet satellite states of Eastern Europe,
Havana's communist regime prevailed during the 1990s in big part
because the international community didn't apply the same
significant level of isolation and pressure, if any. The worsening
situation has been illustrated by the favorite joke in the summer
of 1991. Soon after Fidel Castro came to power, the signs in the
Havana Zoo were changed from "don't feed the animals" to "don't eat
the animal's food". During the Special Period, the signs begged
visitors not to eat the animals. Indeed, the
peacocks, the
buffalo
and even the
rhea reportedly disappeared
from the Havana zoo.
After 50 years of prohibition, the socialist government
increasingly turned to tourism for new financial revenue, and has
allowed foreign investors to build new hotels and develop
hospitality industry. Paradoxically, while foreign investment is
welcome, Cubans are forbidden to participate. The Cuban population
is only allowed to work as cooks, gardeners and taxi-drivers, but
not to become owners or investors of any property. For these reason
among others, the tourism industry during the socialist revolution
has failed to generate the projected revenues.
At its peak, tourists
coming from Canada and Western European nations, generated
approximately 2 billion dollars annually according to National
Geographic
, but that amount has fallen sharply since
then. An effort has also gone into rebuilding Old Havana for
tourist purposes and a number of streets and squares have been
rehabilitated. But Old Havana is a large city, and the restoration
efforts concentrate in all but less than 10% of its area. Sadly,
not only Old Havana, but the city as a whole, looks today as a
victim of intense bombardment, and is crumbling down very
rapidly.
Geography
Satellite picture of Havana
The city extends mostly westward and southward from the bay, which
is entered through a narrow inlet and which divides into three main
harbours: Marimelena, Guanabacoa, and Atarés. The sluggish
Almendares River traverses the city from south to north, entering
the Straits of Florida a few miles west of the bay. The low hills
on which the city lies rise gently from the deep blue waters of the
straits. A noteworthy elevation is the 200-foot- (60-metre-) high
limestone ridge that slopes up from the east and culminates in the
heights of La Cabaña and El Morro, the sites of colonial
fortifications overlooking the bay.
Another notable rise is the hill to the
west that is occupied by the University of Havana
and the Prince's Castle.
Climate
Havana, like much of Cuba, enjoys a pleasant year-round
tropical climate that is tempered by the
island's position in the belt of the trade winds and by the warm
offshore currents. Under the
Koppen climate classification,
Havana has a
tropical savanna
climate. Average temperatures range from in January and
February to in August. The temperature seldom drops below . The
lowest temperature was in Santiago de Las Vegas, Boyeros. The
lowest recorded temperature in Cuba was in Bainoa, Havana province.
Rainfall is heaviest in June and October and lightest from December
through April, averaging annually. Hurricanes occasionally strike
the island, but they ordinarily hit the south coast, and damage in
Havana is normally less than elsewhere in the country.
On the night of July 8-9, 2005, the eastern suburbs of the city
took a direct hit from
Hurricane
Dennis, with winds. The storm whipped fierce waves over
Havana's seawall, and its winds tore apart pieces of some of the
city's crumbling colonial buildings. Chunks of concrete fell from
the city's colonial buildings. At least 5,000 homes were damaged in
Havana's surrounding province. Three months later, in October 2005,
the coastal regions suffered severe flooding following
Hurricane Wilma.The table below lists
temperature averages throughout the year:
City layout
Contemporary Havana can essentially be
described as three cities in one: Old Havana
, Vedado, and the newer suburban districts.
Old Havana, with its narrow streets and overhanging balconies, is
the traditional centre of part of Havana's commerce, industry, and
entertainment, as well as being a residential area.
To the north and west a newer section, centred on the uptown area
known as Vedado, has become the rival of Old Havana for commercial
activity and nightlife.
Centro Habana
, sometimes described as part of Vedado, is mainly a
shopping district that lies between Vedado and Old Havana.
The
Capitolio Nacional
marks the beginning of Centro Habana, a working
class neighborhood. Chinatown and the
Real Fabrica de Tabacos
Partagás, one of Cuba's oldest cigar factories is located in
the area.
A third Havana is that of the more affluent residential and
industrial districts that spread out mostly to the west.
Among
these is Marianao
, one of the newer parts of the city, dating mainly
from the 1920s. Some of the suburban exclusivity was lost
after the revolution, many of the suburban homes having been
nationalized by the Cuban government to serve as schools,
hospitals, and government offices. Several private country clubs
were converted to public recreational centres.Miramar located west
of Vedado along the coast, remains Havana's exclusive area;
mansions, foreign embassies, diplomatic residences, upscale shops,
and facilities for wealthy foreigners are common in the area.
The
International School of
Havana
is located in the Miramar
neighborhood.
In the 1980s many parts of Old Havana, including the Plaza de
Armas, became part of a projected 35-year multimillion-dollar
restoration project. The government sought to instil in Cubans an
appreciation of their past and also to make Havana more enticing to
tourists in accordance with the government's effort to boost
tourism and thus increase foreign exchange. In the past ten years,
with the assistance of foreign aid and under the support of local
city historian Eusebio Leal Spengler, large parts of Habana Vieja
have been renovated. The city is moving forward with their
renovations, with most of the major plazas (Plaza Vieja, Plaza de
la Catedral, Plaza de San Francisco and Plaza de Armas) and major
tourist streets (Obispo and Mercaderes) near completion.
Architecture
- Neo-classical
Havana is unique due to its unrivalled rhythmic arcades built
largely by Spanish immigrants.
Many interior patios remain similar to
designs in Seville
, Cadiz
and
Granada
. Neo-classicism affected all new
buildings in Havana and can be seen all over the city. Many urban
features were introduced into the city at the time including Gas
public lighting in 1848 and the railroad in 1837. In the second
half of the 18th century, sugar and coffee production increased
rapidly, which became essential in the development of Havana's most
prominent architectural style.
Many wealthy Habaneros took their
inspiration from the French
; this can
be seen within the interiors of upper class houses such as the
Aldama Palace built in 1844. This is considered the
most important neoclassical residential building in Cuba and
typifies the design of many houses of this period with portales of
neoclassical columns facing open spaces or courtyards.
In 1925
Jean-Claude
Nicolas Forestier, the head of urban planning in Paris moved to
Havana for five years to collaborate with architects and landscape
designers. In the master planning of the city his aim was to create
a harmonic balance between the classical built form and the
tropical landscape. He embraced and connected the city’s road
networks while accentuating prominent landmarks. His influence has
left a huge mark on Havana although many of his ideas were cut
short by the great depression in 1929. During the first decades of
the 20th century Havana expanded more rapidly than at any time
during its history. Great wealth prompted architectural styles to
be influenced from abroad.
The peak of Neoclassicism came with the
construction of the Vedado
district
(begun in1859). This whole neighbourhood is
littered with set back well-proportioned buildings.

Lonja del Comercio
- Colonial and Baroque
Great riches were brought from the colonialists into and through
Havana as it was a key
transshipment
point between the
new world and
old world. As a result Havana was the most heavily
fortified city in the Americas. Most examples of early architecture
can be seen in military fortifications such as La Fortaleza de San
Carlos de la Cabana (1558 - 1577) designed by Juan Antonelli and
the Castillo del Morro (1589 - 1630). This sits at the entrance of
Havana Bay and provides an insight into the supremacy and wealth at
that time. Old Havana was also protected by a defensive wall begun
in 1674 but had already overgrown its boundaries when it was
completed in 1767, becoming the new neighbourhood of Centro
Habana.
The influence from different styles and cultures can be seen in
Havana's colonial architecture, with a diverse range of
Moorish, Spanish, Italian, Greek and
Roman. The Convento de Santa Clara (1638
- 18th century) is a good example of early Spanish influenced
architecture. Its great hall resembles an inverted ship and shows
the skill of early craftsmen. The Havana cathedral (1748 -1777)
dominating the Plaza de la Catedral (1749) is the best example of
Cuban Baroque. Surrounding it are the former palaces of the Count
de Casa-Bayona (1720 -1746) Marquis de Arcos (1746) and the Marquis
de Aguas Claras (1751 -1775).
- Art Nouveau, Art Deco and Eclectic
At the
turn of the 20th century Havana, along with Buenos Aires
, was the grandest and most important Latin American city in terms of
architecture. This boom period known as
vacas
gordas (fat cows) demonstrates huge examples of buildings from
the international influences of
art
nouveau,
art deco and
eclectic.
Its suburbs developed to what we see today
as Miramar, Marianao, Vedado and Playa
.
The lush and wealthy Miramar was set out on the American street
grid pattern and became a home to diplomats and foreigners.
The
railway terminal (1912) and the University of Havana, (1906 -1940)
and the Capitolio
(1926 - 1929) are a good example of the art nouveau
style. The Capitolio dome was at 62 meters the highest point
in the city and an example of the influence and wealth deriving
from the USA at the time.
The Lopez Serrano building built in 1932 by
Ricardo Mira was the first tall building in Cuba and inspired by
the Rockefeller
Center
in New
York
. Its design influence can be seen in many
buildings in Miami
and
Los
Angeles
. The Edificio Bacardi (1930) is one of
Havana's grandest buildings and its best example of
Art Deco.
Located on a small knoll overlooking the
entrance to Havana Bay, is the art-deco style Hotel
Nacional de Cuba
; originally built in 1929-30 through a joint
agreement with the Cuban government and U.S.-based
bank.
- Modernism
Havana,
like Las
Vegas
in the 40s and 50s, developed from marketing itself
as a destination for gambling and holidays in the sun. Many
high-rise office buildings, and apartment complexes, along with
some hotels built in the 1950s dramatically altered the skyline.
Modernism, therefore, transformed much of the city and should be
noted for its individual buildings of high quality rather than its
larger key buildings.
Examples of the latter are Habana Libre
(1958), which before the revolution was the Havana
Hilton Hotel and La Rampa movie theater
(1955). Famous architects such as
Walter Gropius,
Richard Neutra and
Oscar Niemeyer all passed through the city
while strong influences can be seen in Havana at this time from
Le Corbusier and
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.

"President's avenue" in modern
Havana

"Malecon" avenue in Havana
The Edificio Focsa (1956) represents Havana's economic dominance at
the time. This 35-story complex was conceived and based on
Corbusian ideas of a self-contained city within a city. It
contained 400 apartments, garages, a school, a supermarket, and
restaurant on the top floor. This was the tallest concrete
structure in the world at the time (using no steel frame) and the
ultimate symbol of luxury and excess. The Havana Riviera Hotel
(1957) designed by Irving Feldman, a twenty-one-story, 440-room
edifice, towering above the Malecon in Havana was another angular
and futuristic building build on the Vedado area impressive for its
era.
When
it opened, the Riviera was the largest purpose-built casino-hotel
in Cuba or anywhere in the world, outside Las Vegas (the Havana Hilton
(1958) surpassed its size a year later). It
was owned by the
Caja de Retiro Gastronómico (Hospitality
Workers retirement Fund) to equal the comfort and contemporary
luxury of any Las Vegas hotel of the era.
Jose Luis Sert had also designed an
artificial island off the Malecón whose construction was planned to
take place in the 1960s. It was to incorporate huge modern towers,
hotels, casinos, and shopping centers which would cater for the
city's growing tourism. This like many other post-1959 projects
never materialized.
Landmarks
- Fortaleza San Carlos de la
Cabaña
, a fortress located on the east side of
the Havana bay, La Cabaña is the most impressive fortress from
colonial times, particularly its walls constructed (at the same
time as El Morro) at the end of the 18th century.
- El Capitolio Nacional
, built in 1929 as the Senate and House of
Representatives, this colossal building is recognizable by its dome
which dominates the city's skyline. Inside stands the third
largest indoor statue in the world, La Estatua de la
República. Nowadays, the Cuban
Academy of Sciences
headquarters and the Museo Nacional de Historia
Natural (the National Museum of Natural History) has its venue
within the building and contains the largest natural history
collection in the country.
- Castillo de los Tres Reyes Magos del
Morro
is a picturesque fortress guarding the
entrance to Havana bay, constructed because of the threat to the
harbor from pirates.
- Castillo San
Salvador de la Punta
, a small fortress built in the 16th
century, at the western entry point to the Havana harbour, it
played a crucial role in the defence of Havana during the first
centuries of colonisation. The fortress still houses some
twenty old guns and other military antiques.
- El
Cristo de La Habana, Havana's statue of Christ blesses
the city from the other side of the bay, much like the famous
Cristo
Redentor
in Rio de
Janeiro
. Carved from marble by Jilma Madera, it was erected in 1958 on a
platform which makes a good spot from which to watch old Havana and
the harbor.
- The Great Theatre of Havana
, famous particularly for the acclaimed
National Ballet of Cuba, it
sometimes hosts performances by the National Opera. The
theater is also known as concert hall, Garcia Lorca, the biggest in Cuba.
- Hotel Nacional de Cuba
, Art Deco National Hotel.
- El Malecón Habanero
, the avenue that runs beside the seawall
built along the northern shore of Havana, from Habana Vieja to the
Almendares River, it forms the southern boundary of Old Havana,
Centro Habana and Vedado.
- Museo de la Revolución
, located in the former Presidential Palace, with the yacht
Granma
on display
behind the museum.
- Necrópolis Cristóbal Colón
, a cemetery and open air museum, it is
one of the most famous cemeteries in Latin America, known for its
beauty and magnificence. The cemetery was built in 1876 and
has nearly one million tombs. Some of the gravestones are decorated
with the works of sculptors of the calibre of Ramos Blancos, among
others.
Coat of Arms
Culture
Havana, by far the leading cultural centre of the country, offers a
wide variety of features that range from museums, palaces, public
squares, avenues, churches, fortresses (including the largest
fortified complex in the Americas dating from the 16th through 18th
centuries), ballet and from art and musical festivals to
exhibitions of technology. The restoration of Old Havana offered a
number of new attractions, including a museum to house relics of
the Cuban revolution. The government placed special emphasis on
cultural activities, many of which are free or involve only a
minimal charge.

Parque Central
Before the Communists, Havana cinema rivalled New York City and
Paris. As Guillaume Carpentier put it in a
Le
Monde article, "with nationalisation, they closed one by one,
for lack of maintenance, films or electricity... Havana, Cubans
complain, is a cemetery of cinemas. It is also a cemetery of
bookshops, markets, shops..."
- Old Havana
Old Havana, (
La Habana Vieja in Spanish), contains the
core of the original city of Havana, it is the richest colonial set
of Latin America. Havana Vieja was founded by the Spanish in 1519
in the natural harbor of the Bay of Havana. It became a stopping
point for the treasure laden Spanish
Galleons on the crossing between the New World and
the
Old World. In the 17th century it was
one of the main shipbuilding centers. The city was built in
baroque and
neoclassic style. Many buildings have
fallen in ruin but a number are being restored. The narrow streets
of old Havana contain many buildings, accounting for perhaps as
many as one-third of the approximately 3,000 buildings found in Old
Havana.
Old Havana is the ancient city formed from the port, the official
center and the Plaza de Armas.
Alejo
Carpentier called Old Havana the place "de las columnas" (of
the columns). The Cuban government is taking many steps to preserve
and to restore Old Havana, through the Office of the city
historian, directed by
Eusebio Leal.
Old
Havana and its fortifications were added to the UNESCO
World Heritage List in
1982.
- Chinatown
Havana's
Chinatown (Barrio Chino), once Latin America's largest and most
vibrant Chinatown incorporated into the city by the early part of
the 20th century when hundreds of thousands of Chinese workers were
brought in by Spanish settlers from Guangdong
, Fujian
, Hong Kong
, and Macau
during the
following decades to replace and / or work alongside African slaves. After completing 8-year
contracts or otherwise obtaining their freedom, many Chinese
immigrants settled permanently in Havana. The Chinatown
neighborhood was booming with Chinese restaurants, laundries,
banks, pharmacies, theaters and several Chinese-language
newspapers, the neighborhood comprised 44 square blocks during its
prime. The heart of Havana's chinatown is on
el Cuchillo de
Zanja (or The Zanja Canal). The strip is a pedestrian-only
street adorned with many red lanterns, dancing red paper dragons
and other Chinese cultural designs, there is a great number of
restaurants that serve a full spectrum of Chinese dishes.
The
Chinatown district has two paifang, a large
one located on Calle Dragones, the materials were donated
in the late 90s by the People's Republic of China
, it has a well defined written welcoming sign
in Chinese and Spanish. The
smaller arch is located on Zanja strip. The Cuban's Chinese boom
ended when Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution seized private
businesses, sending tens of thousands of business-minded Chinese
fleeing, mainly to the United States. Descendants are now making
efforts to preserve and revive the culture.
Only one of what were once four Chinese-language newspapers remains
in Havana,
Kwong Wah Po, written by Abel Fung, member of
the Promotional Group of Chinatown. The newspaper is not subject to
state censorship. To tie in with the Revolution's economic reliance
on tourism, attempts have recently been launched to attract
revitalization investment for Chinatown from state-run enterprises
of the People's Republic of China and
overseas Chinese private investors,
particularly
Chinese Canadians. In
addition, Chinatown is today the only area granted autonomy from
many laws that govern the rest of Cuba. Restaurants, for example,
are not state run nor are they subject to the laws of private
restaurants in that they are allowed to have more than 12 seats as
well as serve seafood.
- Visual arts
A small palace located on 17th Street and E, is the very well
maintained neo-classical mansion of the
Countess of Revilla de
Camargo, today it is the
Museum of Decorative Arts
(Museo de Artes Decorativas), known as the
small
French Palace of Havana built between 1924 and 1927, it was
designed in Paris by architects P. Virad and M. Destuque, inspired
in
French Renaissance.
A lavish
display of 18th and 19th century European treasures that recall a
time when Havana was known as the Paris of the Antilles,
and many luxury goods, including porcelain
from Worcester
, Meissen
and Sevres, were
imported.
In the French room, a marble bust of
Marie Antoinette smiles demurely, her
graceful neck intact.
There is another room full of Chinese
screens, another one featuring English
furniture and landspcape painting. For more
than 40 decades the museum has been exhibiting more than 33,000
works dating from the reigns of
Louis XV,
Louis XVI, and
Napoleon III; as well as XVI to
XX Century Oriental
pieces, among many other treasures. The Museum has ten permanent
exhibit halls with works that range from the XVI to the XX
centuries.
Among them are prominent porcelain articles
from the factories in Sèvres and Chantilly
, France; Meissen, Germany
; and Wedgwood, England, as
well as Chinese from the Kien Lung period and Japanese
from the Imari
.
The furniture comes from
Leonard
Boudin,
Simoneau,
Jean Henri Riesener and several
others.
The
National Museum of Fine Arts
is a Fine Arts museum that
exhibits Cuban art collections from the colonial times up to contemporary
generation. There are two impressive buildings, one
dedicated to
Cuban Art and the Universal
Art, in the former
Asturian
Center, the former Fine Arts Museum built in 1954 is dedicated
exclusively to housing Cuba Art collections. Several museums in Old
Havana contain furniture,
silverware,
pottery, glass and other items from the
colonial period. A great one of these is the Palace of the General
Captains, where Spanish governors once lived. The Casa de Africa
presents another aspect of Cuba's history, an impressive collection
of
Afro-Cuban religious artifacts.
The Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes containing works by
Rubens,
Goya and
Velazquez is now closed for
renovations; it is open to public at a temporary location on Calle
Trocadero until renovations are complete. Other museums includes
Casa de los Árabes and the Casa de Asia with
Middle and
Far
Eastern collections. Many of these small
boutiques museums are in elegant old Spanish
architecture houses with airy courtyards. The Museo de Finanzas is
more than an empty vault where dictator Fulgencio Batista once
stashed his loot. A few old bank-notes are displayed on the walls.
Havana's
Museo del Automobil has an impressive collection
of vehicles dating back to a 1905
Cadillac.
In the Automobile museum there is also a
Rolls Royce which belonged to Batista,
near the 1960
Chevrolet that
Che Guevara drove.
The
Museum of
the Revolution
(Museo de la Revolución), designed in
Havana by Cuban architect Maruri, and the Belgian
Jean Beleu, who came up with an eclectic design, harmoniously combines
Spanish, French and German architectural elements. The
museum was the
Presidential
Palace, today, its displays and documents outline Cuba's
history from the beginning of the
neo-colonial period. As
most museums of Havana are situated in Old Havana few of them could
also be found in Vedado. In total, Havana has around 50 museums,
including the Museum of Fine Art, the Revolution and Decorative
Arts; the National Museum of Music; the Museum of Dance and Rum;
the Cigar Museum; the Napoleonic, Colonial and Oricha Museums; the
Museum of Antropology; the Ernest Hemingway Museum; the Jose Marti
Monument; Museums of Natural Sciences, the City, Archeology Museum,
and Gold-and Silverwork. Also the Aircraft, Parfume,
Pharmaceutical, Sports, Numismatic and Weapons Museums.
- Performing arts
After the sun sets, Havana's performing arts come to life.
Facing
the Central Park is the baroque
Great
Theatre of Havana
, a prominent theatre built in 1837. It is
now home of the
National Ballet
of Cuba and the
International Ballet
Festival of Havana, one of the oldest in the New World and
remarkably was once the most technologically advanced in the world,
thanks to the Italian scientist,
Antonio
Meucci.
Meucci's ingenious spirit lives on in the theatre. Located in the
Paseo de Prado in a building known as the
Palacio del
Centro Gallego. The
façade of the
building is adorned with a stone and marble statue. There are also
sculptural pieces by
Giuseppe
Moretti, representing allegories depicting benevolence,
education, music and theatre. The principal theatre is the
García Lorca Auditorium, with seats for
1,500 and balconies.
Glories of its rich history; the Italian
tenor Enrico
Caruso sang, the Russian
ballerina Anna
Pavlova danced, and the French Sarah
Bernhardt acted.
Another grand theatre is the
National Theater of Cuba, housed in
a huge modern building, decorated with works by Cuban artists.
There are two main theatre stages, the Avellaneda hall and the
Covarrubias hall, as well as a smaller theatre workshop space on
the ninth floor. The
Karl Marx
Theater is the venue has an enormous auditorium with seating
capacity of 5500 people, and is generally used for big shows by
stars from Cuba and abroad. The theatre is also a major concert
venue for both local and international artists; singer-songwriters
such as
Carlos Varela,
Silvio Rodríguez and
Pablo Milanés, are just a few of the
famous artists who have graced this particular stage.
More recently, this
was the scene of a concert by British
pop group The
Manic Street Preachers.
Economy
Industry
Havana's economy first developed on the basis of its location,
which made it one of the early great trade centres in the New
World. Sugar and a flourishing
slave trade
first brought riches to the city, and later, after independence, it
became a renowned resort. Despite efforts by Fidel Castro's
government to spread Cuba's industrial activity to all parts of the
island, Havana remains the centre of much of the nation's industry.
The traditional sugar industry, upon which the island's economy has
been based for three centuries, is centred elsewhere on the island
and controls some three-fourths of the export economy. But light
manufacturing facilities, meat-packing plants, and chemical and
pharmaceutical operations are concentrated in Havana. Other
food-processing industries are also important, along with
shipbuilding, vehicle manufacturing, production of alcoholic
beverages (particularly rum), textiles, and tobacco products,
particularly the world-famous
Habanos
cigars.
Although the harbours
of Cienfuegos
and Matanzas
, in particular, have been developed under the
revolutionary government, Havana remains Cuba's primary port
facility; 50% of Cuban imports and exports pass through
Havana. The port also supports a considerable fishing
industry.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the
United States embargo against
Cuba, Havana and the rest of Cuba suddenly plunged into its
worst economic crisis since before the
1959 Revolution, the crisis was known
officially as the
Special Period in Time
of Peace. The effects of the Special Period and consequent food
shortages have had greatest repercussions in the city of Havana. In
addition to the decline in food production needed to serve the
capital, there is also a shortage of petroleum necessary to
transport, refrigerate, and store food available from the rural
agricultural sector. Havana has been designated as a priority in
the National Food Program; urban gardening has figured critically
among the many measures taken to enhance food security. After the
collapse of the Soviet Union, Cuba re-emphasized tourism as a major
industry leading to its recovery. Tourism is now Havana and Cuba's
primary economic source.
Tourism
Before
the Cuban Revolution – and
particularly from 1915 to 1930 - tourism was
one of Cuba
’s major
sources of hard currency (behind only the sugar and tobacco industries). Havana, where a kind of
laissez-faire attitude in all things leisurely was the norm, was
the Caribbean’s most popular destination, particularly with US
citizens, who sought to skirt the restrictions of prohibition
America.
Following a severe drop in the influx of tourists to the island
(resulting, primarily, from the Great Depression, the end of
prohibition in the United States and the outbreak of
World War II), Havana began to welcome visitors
in significant numbers again in the 1950s, when US organized crime
secured control of much of the leisure and tourism industries in
the country. This was a time when Cuba’s foreign minister boasted
that Havana spent as much on parties as any major capital in the
world, when the island was the mob’s most secure link in the
drug-trafficking chain which culminated in the United States and
when the country’s justified reputation for sensuality and dolce
vita pursuits earned it the appellation of “the Latin Las Vegas”.
Meyer Lansky built the
Hotel
Riviera,
Santo Trafficante
came to own shares in the Sevilla and a casino was opened at the
Hotel
Plaza during this time.
It was tourism’s association to the world of gambling and
prostitution which made the revolutionary government established in
1959 approach the entire sector as a social evil to be eradicated.
Many bars and gambling venues were closed down following the
revolution and a government body, the National Institute of the
Tourism Industry, took over many facilities (traditionally
available to wealthy) to make them accessible to the general
public.
With the deterioration of Cuba – US relations and the imposition of
a trade embargo on the island in 1961, tourism dropped drastically
and did not return to anything close to its pre-revolution levels
until 1989. The revolutionary government in general, and Fidel
Castro in particular, initially opposed any considerable
development of the tourism industry, linking the sphere to the
debauchery and criminal activities of times past. In the late
1970s, however, Castro changed his stance and, in 1982, the Cuban
government passed a foreign investment code which opened a number
of sectors, tourism included, to foreign capital.
Through the creation of firms open to such foreign investment (such
as
Cubanacan, established in 1987), Cuba began to attract
capital for hotel development, managing to increase the number of
tourists from 130,000 (in 1980) to 326,000 (by the end of that
decade).
As a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union and its Eastern
European allies in 1989 and early 90s, Cuba was plunged into a
severe economic crisis and saw itself in desperate need of foreign
currency. The answer, again, was found in tourism, and the Cuban
government spent considerable sums in the industry to attract
visitors. Following heavy investment, by 1995, the industry had
become Cuba’s main source of income.
Commerce and finance
After the Revolution, Cuba's traditional capitalist, American
dominated, free-enterprise system was replaced by a heavily
socialized economic system. The majority of business in Cuba is in
the hands of the state. In Havana Cuban-owned businesses and
U.S.-owned businesses were nationalized and today most businesses
operate solely under state control. In Old Havana and throughout
Vedado there are a several small private businesses, such as
shoe-repair shops or dressmaking facilities, but their number is
steadily declining. Banking as well is also under state control,
and the
National Bank of Cuba,
headquartered in Havana, is the control center of the Cuban
economy. Its branches in some cases occupy buildings that were in
pre-revolutionary times the offices of Cuban or foreign
banks.
Vedado is today Havana's financial district, the main banks,
airline companies offices, shops, most businesses headquarters,
numerous high-rise apartments and hotels, are located in the area.
In the late 1990s Vedado, located along the Caribbean waterfront,
started to represent the principal commercial area. It was
developed extensively between 1930 and 1960, when Havana developed
as a major destination for U.S. tourists; high-rise hotels,
casinos, restaurants, and upscale commercial
establishments, many reflecting the art deco style. The University
of Havana is located in Vedado.
Transportation
Transport
Havana was renowned for an excellent network of public
transportation by bus and taxi. A subway system modeled after that
of New York City was even proposed in 1921. In 1959, Havana's buses
carried out over 29,000 daily bus trips across a dense layout of
routes that connected the 600,000 inhabitants of Havana. After the
Socialist Revolution, all business were confiscated, and public
transport was assigned to the Ministerio del Transporte (MITRANS).
In the Province of the City of Havana, Provincial Transport
Authority functions are carried out by 11 divisions. But this
bureaucratic, complex system of central control produces today only
8,000 trips per day, for a population that triples that of
1959.
Public transport must be self-financing. Until 1994, general
government funds from MITRANS (of around $US4 million per annum)
were used to fund the Provincial Transport Directorate in the City
of Havana budget. Public transport in Havana has always been able
to cover operating expenses that are paid in
Cuban Pesos through the fares. But there has been
a constant problem with financing fuel, new vehicles and spare
parts and other supplies which require hard currency like US
dollars – which led to a reduction in service provision. To address
this, enterprises that generate hard currency (like the tourist
taxis, tourist rental cars, and tourist cocotaxi elements of
Panatrans and the Transmetro services that hire out buses and
trucks to dollar-owning companies) cross subsidise the other
services, in particular OM and MetroBus.
In addition, a service planning team from the
Regional Transit Authority of Paris (RATP) has been
working to redefine the public transport network in the capital.
The main aim of this project has been to rationalise the number of
existing routes to match the actual passenger demand. The first of
these new principal routes has already been put into place.
- Air
Havana was the destination of the first international flight
carried by a US airline: in 1927 Rickenbacker's Pan-American
Airlines flew from Key West, Florida, to Havana.In 1946, a Cuban
pioneer named Reinaldo Ramirez, started a route, the first from
Latin America to Europe, that flew from Havana to Madrid, Spain.
The ship was named "La Ruta de Colon", and the company name was
"Aerovias Cubanas internacionales"
Havana is served by José Martí International
Airport
. It lies about 11 km south of the city
center, and is the main hub of
Cubana de Aviación. José Martí
International Airport is Cuba's main international and domestic
getaway, it is also hub of
Aerogaviota
and
Aero Caribbean. The airport
serves several million passengers each year, 80% of Cuba's
international passengers along with Varadero's Airport, it handles
flights from over 25 international airlines serving more than 60
worldwide destinations, mainly in Europe, North, Central and South
America and over 3 national airlines serving 16 domestic
destinations.
Havana is also served by Playa
Baracoa Airport
which is small airport to the west of city used for
some domestic flights, primarily Aerogaviota. Cuban
passengers are required to obtain a permit from the authorities to
leave the island, know as the White Card, and those Cubans living
abroad are required a visa to enter their own country.
- Rail
Havana has a network of suburban, interurban and long-distance rail
lines, the only one in the Caribbean region. The railways are
nationalised and run by the UFC (Union de
Ferrocarriles de Cuba – Union for
Railways of Cuba). Rail service connects Havana from the
Central Rail Station,
La Coubre' and
Casablanca stations to various
Cuban provinces. Currently annual
passenger volume is some 12 million, but demand is estimated at
two-and-a-half to three times this value, with the busiest route
being between Havana and Santiago de Cuba, some 836 km apart
by rail. In 2000 the Union de Ferrocarriles de Cuba bought French
first class airconditioned coaches.
Fast trains line 1 and 2 between Havana (Central Station) and
Santiago de Cuba use comfortable stainless-steel air-conditioned
coaches bought from French Railways and now known as "el tren
francés" (the French train). It runs daily at peak periods of the
year (Summer season, Christmas & Easter), and on every second
day at other times of the year.
These coaches were originally used on the
premier Trans Europ Express
service between Paris, Brussels
and Amsterdam
before being replaced with high speed Thalys trains. They were shipped to the Cuban
Railways System in 2001. It offers two classes of seating, basic
leatherette "especial" and quite luxurious "primera
especial".
- Bus
The Havana public buses are carried out by two divisions, Omnibus
Metropolitanos (OM) and MetroBus. The Omnibus Metropolitanos
division has one of the most used and largest
urban bus fleets in the country, its fleet
is widely diverse in new and old donated bus models, primerally
well used
Busscar Urbanuss manufactured by
Mercedes-Benz with an additional
new 255 purchased in 2004. and the infamous camellos (camels),
which are truck trailers ill-fitted for passenger transportation.
The Cuban government will invest millions of dollars for the
acquisition of 1,500 new
Yutong urban buses
and another 1,000 interprovincial buses in a 5 years period, which
unfortunately will not cover the demand of transportation services.
There are several inter-province bus services such as
Astro, the regular National public transportation, Astro
connects the capital city with all over the island, in 2005 Astro
completely replaced its fleet with brand new
Yutong buses.
The Metrobus division are known as "camellos" (camels). The
camellos operate the busiest routes and are trailers transformed
into buses known as camels, so called for their two humps. It's a
Cuban invention after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and
the Special Period began.
The Metrobus division purchased seven
articulated buses which are
currently serving the M-5 camello line, covering a
route from San Agustín in La Lisa
municipality to Vedado. All camello trailers
will be replaced by new articulated buses.
Public transportation MetroBus (former camello) routes:
- M-1 Alamar -
Vedado
via
Fraternidad
- M-2 Fraternidad - Santiago de Las
Vegas
- M-3 Alamar - Ciudad
Deportiva
- M-4 Fraternidad -
San Agustin via Marianao

- M-5 Vedado - San
Agustin
- M-6 Calvario - Vedado
- M-7 Parque de la Fraternidad -
Alberro via Cotorro
Administration

The 15 administrative divisions of
Havana
Government
Havana is administered by a city council, with a mayor as chief
administrative officer. The city is dependent upon the national
government, however, for much of its budgetary and overall
political direction. The national government is headquartered in
Havana and plays an extremely visible role in the city's life.
Moreover, the all-embracing authority of many national
institutions, including the
Communist Party of Cuba (Partido
Comunista de Cuba; PCC), the Revolutionary Armed Forces
(
Military of Cuba), the militia,
and neighbourhood groups called the
Committees for the
Defense of the Revolution (CDRs), has led to a declining role
for the city government, which, nevertheless, still provides such
essential services as garbage collection and fire protection. The
CDRs, which exist in virtually every street and apartment block,
have two main functions: first, to actually defend the revolution
against both external and internal opposition by keeping routine
record of every resident's activities and, second, to handle
routine tasks in maintaining neighborhoods.
Havana city borders are contiguous with the Habana Province. Thus
Havana functions as both a city and a
province. There are two joint councils upon which
city and provincial authorities meet—one embraces municipal and
provincial leaders on a national basis, the other, a Havana city
and provincial council. Havana is divided into 15 constituent
municipalities. Until 1976 there were six subdivisions, but in that
year the city's borders were expanded to include the entire
metropolitan area.
Municipios
The city is divided into 15
municipios - municipalities or
boroughs. (Numbers refer to map above).
- Source: Population from 2004 Census. Area from
1976 municipal re-distribution.
Demographics
Havana's
rich cultural milieu included not only Spaniards from diverse regions of the Iberian
Peninsula
but other European
peoples as well. In the era before Fidel Castro came to
power, the city was economically and ethnically divided. On the one
hand, there was the minority of the wealthy, educated
elite, together with a strong middle class, and on the
other was the working-class majority. This division was largely
based on ethnic background: whites tended to be more well-to-do,
while blacks and mulattoes generally were poor. The economic
structure did not provide much opportunity for blacks and mulattoes
except in the more menial occupations. There was also little
opportunity for them to obtain an education. Under the Castro
government that came to power in 1959, this system changed.
Educational and employment opportunities were made available to
Cubans of all ethnic backgrounds; however, top positions and fields
of study were usually reserved only to signed communist party
members and record showed supporters, though this has lost some
strictness in recent years. In housing, the government follows an
official policy of no discrimination based on ethnic background,
and independent observers tend to believe this policy has been more
or less faithfully carried out.
During
the 18th, 19th and early part of the 20th century, large waves of
Canarian, Catalan, and Galicians emigrated from the Iberian
Peninsula
to Havana.
The Cuban government controls the movement of people into Havana on
the grounds that the Havana metropolitan area (home to nearly 20%
of the country's population) is overstretched in terms of land use,
water, electricity, transportation, and other elements of the urban
infrastructure. There is a population of internal migrants to
Havana nicknamed "Palestinos" (Palestinians); these mostly hail
from the eastern region of
Oriente. Havana
has a significant minority of
Chinese, before the revolution the Chinese
population counted to over 200,000, today Chinese born or ancestors
could count up to 100,000. CIA World Factbook. Cuba. 2006.
September 6,
2006./www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/cu.html>.
Havana
also shelters a non-Cuban population of an unknown size, including
Russians living mostly in Habana
del Este
that constantly emigrated during the Soviet
era. There is a population of several
thousand North African teen and pre-teen refugees.
Roman Catholics form the largest
religious group in Havana.
The Jewish community
in Havana has reduced after the Revolution from once having
embraced more than 15,000 Jews, many of whom had fled Nazi persecution and subsequently left Cuba to Miami or
returned to Israel
after Castro took to power in 1959. The city
once had five
synagogues, but only three
remain (one
Orthodox, one
Conservative and one
Sephardic). In February 2007 the
New York Times estimated that there were
about 1,500 known Jews living in Havana.
Infrastructure
Education
The national government assumes all responsibility for education,
and there are adequate primary, secondary, and vocational training
schools throughout Havana. The vocational
Cuban National Ballet School
with 4,350 students is the biggest ballet school in the world and
the most prestigious
ballet school in Cuba,
directed by
Ramona de Sáa. In 2002 with the expansion of
the school, out of 52,000 students interested to join the school,
4,050 were selected. All children receive an education. The schools
are of varying quality and education is free and compulsory at all
levels except higher learning, which is also free. The University
of Havana, located in the Vedado section of Havana, was established
in 1728 and was regarded as a leading institution of higher
learning in the Western Hemisphere. Soon after the Revolution, the
university, as well as all other educational institutions, were
nationalized. Since then several other universities have opened,
like the Polytechnic Institute "Joe Antonio Echeverria" where the
vast majority of today's Cuban engineers are formed.
Health
Under the Cuban government all citizens are covered by the national
health care plan. Administration of the health care system for the
nation is centred largely in Havana. Hospitals in Havana are run by
the national government, and citizens are assigned hospitals and
clinics to which they may go for attention. During the 1980s Cuba
began to attract worldwide attention for its treatment of heart
diseases and eye problems, some of this treatment administered in
Havana. There has long been now a high standard of health care in
the city resulting from the Revolution.
Services
Utility services are under the control of several nationalized
state enterprises that have developed since the
Cuban revolution. Water, electricity, and
sewage service are administered in this fashion. Electricity is
supplied by generators that are fueled with oil. Much of the
original power plant installations, which operated before the
Revolutionary government assumed control, have become somewhat
outdated. Electrical blackouts occurred, prompting the national
government in 1986 to allocate the equivalent of $25,000,000 to
modernize the electrical system. It is said that any part of Havana
is within five minutes of a fire-fighting unit; the equipment is
largely new.
Sports
Many Cubans are avid sports fans who particularly favour baseball.
Havana's two baseball teams in the
Cuban National Series are
Industriales and
Metropolitanos.
The city has several
large sports stadiums, the largest one is the Estadio
Latinoamericano
. Admission to sporting events is generally
free, and impromptu games are played in neighborhoods throughout
the city. Social clubs at the beaches provide facilities for water
sports and include restaurants and dance halls.
Notable people born in Havana
See also :Category:People from Havana
(category)
- Roberto Goizueta, Coca-Cola Company CEO (1931-1997)
- Felipe Poey, zoologist
(1799–1891)
- José Martí, poet, writer,
nationalist leader (1853–1895)
- Ernesto Lecuona, composer,
performer (1895–1963)
- Dulce María Loynaz,
author (1902–1997)
- Orestes López, musician
(1908-1991)
- Cundo Bermúdez, painter
(1914-)
- Alicia Alonso, Prima Ballerina
Assoluta (1920–)
- María Antonieta Pons,
actress, Rumba dancer (1922–2004)
- Celia Cruz, singer (1925-2003)
- Elena Burke, singer (1928–2002)
- Alberto Korda, photographer,
famous for his photo "Guerrillero Heróico" of Che Guevara
(1928-2001)
- Camilo Cienfuegos,
revolutionary along with Fidel Castro and Che Guevara
(1932–1959)
- Ricardo Alarcón,
politician, president of the National Assembly of Cuba (1937–)
- Felix Baloy, vocalist with the
Afro Cuban All Stars and others
(1943-)
- Alex Ferrer, Judge on Judge Alex (1961-)
- David Fumero, actor (1972–)
- Cristina Saralegui,
journalist, talk show host (1948–)
- Oswaldo Payá, political
activist (1952–)
- Alina Fernández, daughter
and a critic of Fidel Castro (1956–)
- Andy García, actor (1956–)
- Elizabeth Caballero,
International Opera Singer (1974–)
- Maria
Teresa, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg, grand ducal consort of
Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg (1956–)
- Gloria Estefan, singer (1957–)
(emigrated to the U.S. as a child)
- Carlos del Junco, musician
(1958–)
- Al Jourgensen, musician
(1958-)
- César Évora, actor
(1959–)
- Alfredo Alonso, broadcasting
executive (1960-)
- Juan Contino Aslán,
politician, city mayor of Havana (1960-)
- Dave Lombardo, heavy metal drummer
(1965–)
- Felipe Pérez Roque,
politician, foreign minister of Cuba (1965-)
- Humberto Padrón, film
director (1967–)
- Pedro Álvarez
Castelló, painter, (1967-2004)
- Rey Ruiz, musician (1970–)
- Amarilis Savón, judoka
(1974–)
- Vyacheslav Kernozenko,
Ukrainian football goalkeeper (1976–)
- William Levy, actor
(1979–)
- Mario Cimarro, actor (1971-)
- Roger T. Benitez, United States federal judge
(1950–)
- Yotuel Romero, musician (1976–)
- Michel Hernandez, MLB player for the Tampa Bay Rays, (1978-)
- Tony Fossas, MLB player for the
Texas Rangers, Milwaukee Brewers, Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Cardinals, Seattle Mariners, Chicago Cubs, and the New York Yankees (1957-)
- George Lauzerique, MLB player
for the Kansas City/Oakland
Athletics and Milwaukee
Brewers (1947-)
- Marcelino Lopez, MLB player for
the Philadelphia Phillies,
California Angels, Baltimore Orioles, Milwaukee Brewers, and the Cleveland Indians (1943-)
- Alex Sanchez, MLB
player for the Milwaukee Brewers,
Detroit Tigers, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, and the San Francisco Giants (1976-)
- Arawak Jah Cuban
internationally known reggae star in exile, (Orlando, FL
),(1960-)
- Ivan Moffat, (1918-2002) screenwriter
File:Felipe Poey.jpg|Felipe
Poey y Aloy
zoologist
(1799–1891)File:Jose Marti.jpg|José
Martí
poet, writer, nationalist leader
(1853–1895)File:Ricardo Alarcon.jpg|Ricardo Alarcón
politician
(1937–)File:Andy Garcia at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival
2.jpg|Andy García
actor
(1956–)
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Havana is
twinned with:
- Barcelona
, Spain
- Beijing, China

- Belgrade
, Serbia
- Belo Horizonte
, Brazil
- Bogotá
, Colombia
- Caracas
, Venezuela
- Cartagena
, Colombia
- Constanţa
, Romania
- Cuzco
, Peru
- Esfahān
, Iran
- Glasgow
, Scotland
, UK
- Istanbul
, Turkey
- Madrid
, Spain
- La Paz
, Bolivia
- Manila
, Philippines
- Mobile
, United States
- Moscow
, Russia
- Oaxaca
, Mexico
- Toledo
, Spain
- Porto Alegre
, Brazil
- Rotterdam
, The Netherlands
- Saint Petersburg
, Russia
- Salvador
, Brazil
- Santiago
, Dominican Republic
- Santo Domingo
, Dominican Republic
- Santos
, Brazil
- São Paulo
, Brazil
- Tehran
, Iran
- Tijuana
, Mexico
- Vitória, Brazil

References
Notes
Sources
- King, Charles Spencer (2009) Havana My Kind of Town.
USA: CreateSpace. ISBN 1-44043-269-4.
- Havana: History and Architecture of a Romantic City.
Alicia García Santana. Monacelli, October 2000. ISBN
1-58093-052-2.
- The Rough Guide to Cuba (3rd ed.). Rough Guides, May
2005. ISBN 1-84353-409-6.
- Barclay, Juliet (1993). Havana: Portrait of a City.
London: Cassell. ISBN 1-84403-127-6 (2003 paperback edition). — A
comprehensive account of the history of Havana from the early 16th
century to the end of the 19th century.
- Carpentier, Alejo. La ciudad de las columnas (The city
of columns). — A historical review of the city from one of the
major authors in the iberoamerican literature, a native of this
city.
- Cluster, Dick, & Rafael Hernández, History of
Havana. New York: Palgrave-MacMillan, 2006. ISBN
1-4039-7107-2. A social history of the city from 1519 to the
present, co-authored by a Cuban writer and editor resident in
Havana and an American novelist and writer of popular history.
- Eguren, Gustavo. La fidelísima Habana (The very
faithful Havana). — A fundamental illustrated book for those who
wants to know the history of La Habana, includes chronicles,
articles from natives and non natives, archives documents, and
more.
- United Railways of Havana. Cuba: A Winter Paradise. 1908-1909,
1912-1913, 1914-1915 and 1915–1916 editions. New York, 1908, 1912,
1914 and 1915. Maps, photos and descriptions of suburban and
interurban electric lines.
- Electric Traction in Cuba. Tramway & Railway World
(London), April 1, 1909, pp. 243–244. Map, photos and
description of Havana Central Railroad.
- The Havana Central Railroad. Electrical World (New
York), April 15, 1909, pp. 911–912. Text, 4 photos.
- Three-Car Storage Battery Train. Electric Railway
Journal (New York), September 28, 1912, p. 501. Photo and
description of Cuban battery cars.
- Berta Alfonso Gallol. Los Transportes Habaneros. Estudios
Históricos. La Habana, 1991. The definitive survey (but no pictures
or maps).
- Six Days in Havana by James A. Michener and John
Kings. University of Texas Press; 1ST edition (1989). ISBN
978-0292776296. Interviews with close to 200 Cubans of widely
assorted backgrounds and positions, and concerns how the country
has progressed after 90 years of independence from Spain and under
the 30-year leadership of Castro.
- One more interesting note about that edition of the New York
Times: On page 5, there is a short blurb mentioning, "The plan for
holding a Pan-American exhibition at Buffalo has been shelved for
the present owing to the unsettled condition of the public mind
consequent upon the Spanish-Cuban complications." President
McKinley was assassinated at the
Pan-American Exhibition when it was finally held in 1901.
External links
- www.lib.utexas.edu/maps, Central Havana
Map
- contactcuba.com, Havana City Map
- havanatimes.org, Havana Travel Q & A
- Clickable map of Havana
- canada.com, "Fading Grandeur and Teeming Night
Life Make Havana Hard to Resist", by Victor Swoboda,
CanWest, September 14, 2009
- sfgate.com, "Searching for Cuba's Next Big
Revolution", by Spud Hilton, San Francisco Chronicle,
April 19, 2009
- sophiaspring.com, Sophia Spring's Havana
photographs from the series '50 Portraits of Cuba, 50 Years
On'
- fotopedia.com, Selected photos of Havana