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.

    
  • Museo del Chocolate

    Museo del Chocolate  LH 3

    Although calling this place a museum is an overstatement, there are some intriguing artefacts relating to the history of chocolate production in Cuba. More appropriate would be to call it Café Fábrica …

    Castillo de San Salvador de la Punta

    Castillo de San Salvador de la Punta  LH 3

    Given its strategic location on one side of the harbor mouth, this fortress was one of the two most important defensive constructions in Havana’s defense system in colonial times. Construction works t …

    Oratorio de San Felipe Neri

    Oratorio de San Felipe Neri  LH 3

    Originally a small church built in 1693, it was acquired two centuries later by a bank. The building was eventually returned to the city as a concert hall where lyric theater and song is performed. It …

    Hotel Saratoga

    Hotel Saratoga  LH 3

    The Saratoga Hotel – Reborn The oldest reference of what today is the elegant eclectic Saratoga Hotel dates back to 1879 when construction works for a three-story building began. The first floor was s …

    La Casa del Agua La Tinaja

    La Casa del Agua La Tinaja  LH 3

    The quaint cobbled section of Calle Obispo between Calles Oficios and Mercaderes is lined with the oldest buildings in Havana. The row of 17th-century townhouse mansions includes the tiny La Casa del …

    Cementerio Chino

    Cementerio Chino  LH 3

    Chinese immigrants were promised rivers of gold on their arrival in Cuba, but in reality they were confined to barracks in abject poverty, where conditions were brutal. Many of them thought of returni …

    Iglesia de Santa Rita de Casia

    Iglesia de Santa Rita de Casia  LH 3

    The succession of parabolic arcs made of reinforced concrete in contrast to the three stories of rectangular windows which alternate with the arcs create a sense of motion and modernity, accentuated b …

    Plaza Carlos III

    Plaza Carlos III  LH 3

    This is a four-story commercial center that includes shops, fast food outlets, a bank, food market, etc, which after wide-ranging remodeling and restoration, first opened in October 1997. At the time, …

    Instituto de Segunda Enseñanza de La Habana

    Instituto de Segunda Enseñanza de La Habana  LH 2

    The Institute of Secondary Education of Havana was founded in 1863 and originally located on Calle Obispo. It was later moved to this site in 1924 as part of the construction program for the area in t …

    Edificio Rodríguez Vázquez

    Edificio Rodríguez Vázquez  LH 2

    This 1941 building repeats the structure of lines that emphasize verticality and includes a small two story-tower. Initially known as the Rodríguez Vázquez Building, it included two cinemas, a café-re …

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