As Cuba's political and economic center, it has become a museum to a
broken communist dream, yet it is much more than just that: it is
the focus of Cuba's youth culture; the place where you'll find the
most magnificent hotels and the liveliest discotheques, where the
Revolution seems to have come full circle and, uncannily, recreated
the absurdly decadent world of Graham Greene's Our Man in Havana.
Havana is an exhilarating place, but it can also be exhausting.
There is a neurotic, anxious edge to life here, quite unlike
anything you'll find in the rest of Cuba.
Central Havana: Along with Habana Vieja, Centro Habana is the
most populated and overcrowded part of the city. It is a tumbledown
residential / commercial area, the city's main shopping street,
Calle San Rafael, traverses it from the Parque Central westwards.
The large Partagas tobacco factory, directly behind the Capitolio,
is the biggest export factory in the country, with 200 rollers
turning out 5 million cigars a year.
Walking around this area you understand why Havana is sometimes
referred to as a City of Columns; almost every buildings displays
either one or a mixture of the Corinthian, Doric or Ionic types of
this structure.
Vedado: This part of the city is occupied primarily by office
blocks and hotels, business is centred on La Rampa. Directly east on
Calle San Miguel between calles Ronda and Mazon is the fine Museo
Napoleonico, this mansion is house of a remarkable collection of
Napoleonic memorabilia. Vedado's top sight is undoubedly the
Cementerio de Cristobal Colon.
Miramar: Further to the west this area is home to some of the
most expensive hotels, restaurants in Havana and the majority of the
country's foreign embassies, the tree-lined avenues and stately
mansions on and around Fifth Avenue suggest that this is where
Havana's elite reside.
The area contains a few interesting museums, most notably the Museo
del Ministerio del Interior which will be of interest to any one
wanting to brush up on the antics of the cold war. |