Guanabacoa

CA3
Neighborhood
CA Ranking: 3
  • ‘You need to go to Guanabacoa’ is a popular phrase used in Cuba when someone is going through a rough patch. And although the area is known for its babalawos (divination experts, priests in the Yoruba religion) and Santeria practitioners, there is more to it.

    The meaning of the word ‘Guanabacoa,’ of aboriginal origin, is still not clear and proposals made by philologists range from ‘area where there is plenty of water’ to ‘high palm grove.’ Also known as “el pueblo embrujado” (the haunted town), Guanabacoa was founded in 1554 in an attempt to “concentrate the indigenous population living in the area.” In 1762, during the British invasion of Havana, the mayor of the villa, José ‘Pepe’ Antonio Gómez Bollones led the Guanabacoa Militia and faced the invading forces (this is when machetes were first used as weapons). This is also the place where National Hero José Martí supposedly gave his first public speech in Cuba, and was also the birthplace of singer Rita Montaner, after whom the Casa de la Cultura in the municipality is named.

    Guanabacoa is inland from Regla is, once a pre-colonial community and later a center for the slave trade. Today, it’s a lively town, just within the city boundaries, and is the heart of Havana’s Afro-Cuban religions: Regla de Ocha, Palo Monte and Abakuá. The town’s historical center was declared a National Monument in 1999, and has some of the most splendid churches in the region.

    Guanabacoa is best reached from Havana by car, on the Vía Blanca highway then the Carretera Vieja, passing the Ermita de Potosí, on the land of the old cemetery. Built in 1644, making it one of the oldest churches in Cuba, it has a Mudéjar panelled ceiling and an original stone floor.

    
  • Casa Víctor Hugo

    Casa Víctor Hugo  LH 3

    This institution is supported by donations from Ediciones Boloña, a publishing house of the City Historian’s Office. Its purpose is to make known the work of the famous French author Victor Hugo, as w …

    Maqueta de la Habana Vieja

    Maqueta de la Habana Vieja  LH 3

    This captivating and incredibly detailed scale model (1:500) of the old city is a must-see while exploring Habana Vieja, of which it provides a great overall perspective. Measuring 8 meteres long by 6 …

    Palacio de la Artesanía (Casa de Don Mateo Pedroso)

    Palacio de la Artesanía (Casa de Don Mateo Pedroso)  LH 3

    Strategically located on Cuba Street between Cuarteles and Peña Pobre, it looks out onto the bay. Noteworthy in this 18-century mansion is the 32 meter-long continuous balcony on its façade, one of th …

    Fábrica de Tabacos de Calixto López

    Fábrica de Tabacos de Calixto López  LH 3

    Built in 1886, the Calixto López y Compañía tobacco factory and warehouse takes up the whole block between Zulueta, Economía, Gloria and Misión streets. It has the typical ground floor, mezzanine and …

    Templo Nacional Masónico

    Templo Nacional Masónico  LH 3

    This building of imposing image is an example of conventionalism at a time when the architectural avant-garde had already paved the way for new, bolder ideas. From that premise, however, this construc …

    Iglesia del Santo Cristo del Buen Viaje

    Iglesia del Santo Cristo del Buen Viaje  LH 3

    Erected in 1640 simultaneously with the Plaza del Cristo around the Ermita del Humilladero–the final station of the Vía Crucis or procession of the Stations of the Cross on Good Friday, which started …

    Museo de los Bomberos

    Museo de los Bomberos  LH 3

    This singular 1910 Fire Station has a simple but refined façade that features a kind of triumphal arch dominated by a central double-heighted void. Today, it houses a lovely museum about the history o …

    Faro O’Donnell

    Faro O’Donnell  LH 3

    The original lighthouse at the Castillo de los Tres Reyes del Morro was erected on the Morrillo Semibastion and was fueled by wood until the 17th century, then by gas until the 19th century and finall …

    Casa del Benemérito de las Américas Benito Juárez

    Casa del Benemérito de las Américas Benito Juárez  LH 3

    Housed in the former 18th-century mansion of the Pedroso y Herrera family, this museum is named for Mexican president Benito Juárez, who visited Havana in 1853 and 1862. It has four rooms dedicated to …

    El Templete

    El Templete  LH 3

    Built in 1827, El Templete commemorates the first mass and town council held in the city, at the foot of a ceiba tree that grew on the northeast corner of what would soon evolve as the Plaza de Armas. …

    « 14 of 22 pages »