Hotel Sevilla

CA3
General sightseeing
Architectural style: Spanish Moorish
CA Ranking: 3
Admission: None
Trocadero 55, entre Prado y Zulueta
  • After the city walls began to be demolished in 1863, construction works for a luxury hotel began on El Prado Avenue, one of the city’s most popular promenades. Manuel López and Urbano González, owners of the Inglaterra Hotel, commissioned the construction of the Havana Biltmore Hotel (which was the hotel’s original name) to Cuban architect José Torava and engineer Aurelio Sandoval, whose design resembled the Spanish-Moorish style of the Patio de los Leones of the Palacio Alhambra, in Granada, Spain. Construction works began in 1880 by one of the few Cuban construction companies existing at the time, El Guardián. The hotel was inaugurated on March 22, 1908, at a cost of 500,000 pesos. The cream of the city’s bourgeoisie, including the Bishop of Havana and several government officials, attended the magnificent opening ceremony.

    The hotel could be accessed from either Trocadero or Zulueta streets. The ground floor had a drug store, barber shop, café and conference hall, while the hotel’s 162 bedrooms, complete with bathroom and telephone, were located on the upper floors. Its grand central courtyard, in Andalusian style, improved the circulation of air in the rooms, making them more comfortable during the summer. And part of the hotel’s charm was its furniture, the work of Vila & Rodríguez. All in all, its architecture, decoration, services and location made the Sevilla one of the most frequented hotels during the early 20th century. Additionally, the Roof Garden became the meeting place par excellence for the most important politicians and business men of that time, who would enjoy the fantastic view and formal atmosphere while planning campaign strategies and closing deals.

    With the purchase of the building next to it, an expansion of the hotel, including a new entrance on El Prado, additional space for a number of shops and 138 new rooms, for a total of 300, was completed by Arellano & Mendoza in 1924. The hotel, now bearing the name of Hotel Sevilla Biltmore, had become so prestigious that many of the attendants to the conference of the Organization of American States held in Havana in 1928 chose to stay there.

    The 1929 economic crisis forced the owners to close the hotel. It was reopened four years later by Sucesión Falla Gutiérrez, and in 1939 Don Amleto Battisti y Lora, after bribing a number of government officials, acquired a large percentage of the company shares and gained control of the hotel. Battisti made number of renovations and changes at the hotel, including the opening of a bar decorated by the renowned Cuban caricaturist Conrado Massager and the construction of a casino, mainly frequented by members of the Italian-American mafia.

    Right after the triumph of the 1959 Revolution, Battisti asked for political asylum at the Uruguayan embassy and the revolutionary government went on to manage the hotel. In 1969, the Hotel Sevilla was completely restored and transformed into a hotel and catering school. And more recently, in 1993, it was renovated again to meet the highest standards of the industry. It is operated by the French chain Mercure (ACCOR Group).

    
  • Zoológico de La Habana

    Zoológico de La Habana  LH 3

    Opened in 1939, this is Cuba’s oldest zoo. It is also known as Zoológico de 26 and is one of the most popular places for Cuban families to visit. And although there are many different species, monkeys …

    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 …

    Edificio López Serrano

    Edificio López Serrano  LH 3

    It is considered the first Cuban skyscraper as it reproduces, on a modest scale, the model of tall New York buildings, conceived with layered fittings in order to let air and light in. The linear and …

    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 …

    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. …

    Museo del Tabaco

    Museo del Tabaco  LH 3

    Housed in an 18th-century mansion that once belonged to merchant Don Bartolomé Luque, this modest museum displays lithographic prints, old pipes and lighters, early cigar boxes and ashtrays, furniture …

    Fundación Alejo Carpentier (Casa de la Conde de la Reunión)

    Fundación Alejo Carpentier (Casa de la Conde de la Reunión)  LH 3

    On Empedrado Street, between Cuba and San Ignacio, a few doors from the famous Bodeguita del Medio, stands this building which belonged to Don Santiago de la Cuesta, Conde de la Reunión. Its style is …

    Hotel Habana Riviera

    Hotel Habana Riviera  LH 3

    This hotel was opened in December, 1957, with a performance by Ginger Rogers at the Copa Room cabaret and was blessed by Cardinal Manuel Arteaga just a few days later. The construction is a fantastic …

    « 15 of 22 pages »