With the Closure of the Riviera Hotel and the Progressive Death of the Habana Libre, Preparations Are Made for the Arrival of the Torre K

“Not even the fire extinguishers are ready,” says an employee of the Habana Libre

At the entrance to the Riviera, a guard and a woman watering the grass were the only “guests” in the accommodation. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Jorge Lassa, Havana, 16 February 2025 — For decades, the Habana Libre hotel has been an element of beauty and glamour in the skyline of the Cuban capital. But behind its beautiful façade, the central building in El Vedado hides a panorama of deterioration and abandonment that drives away tourists and scandalizes tour guides. Its close cousins, the Riviera and the Colina hotel, are also not doing well in these times.

Carlos is dedicated to inspecting the security systems of hotels and recreational centers. With more than three decades in his profession, this Havana resident’s opinion is blunt: “The Habana Libre is a danger, it is very deteriorated and in the last inspection we did it practically failed in all parameters, not even the fire extinguishers are working,” he comments to 14ymedio.

“They have had to close many rooms and, right now, the hotel is barely functioning. In operation are the lobby and the 25th floor, where activities take place, but the rest of the facility is practically unused,” warns Carlos. “They have not decided to close it completely because it is a very emblematic place and they are also waiting for the opening of the K Tower, which has the capacity to absorb the clients who want to be in that area.” continue reading

“The rooms are terrible, the air conditioning barely works, there is barely any hot water in the bathrooms”

This is how the worker refers to the controversial new skyscraper at 23rd and K, which will house a luxury hotel managed by the Spanish company Iberostar, whose opening has not yet been finalized despite having been announced, first, for January 15 and, later, for February 1.

It is not necessary to delve into the bowels of the accommodation, as Carlos and his team do, to notice how breakdowns and neglect have taken over the former Habana Hilton, opened in 1958 and built with money from the retirement funds of the Cuban Union of Gastronomic Workers. Now, little remains of that former splendor of its early years, when it even housed Fidel Castro’s main office after he came to power.

“I was there in November,” says Marlén, a Cuban who works in the tourism sector. “The rooms are awful, the air conditioning barely works, there is barely any hot water in the bathrooms, leaks keep several rooms closed and everything looks very old.” In the hallways leading to each room, the smell of humidity seeps into your nose and damage accumulates in corners, lamps and surfaces.

In the hallways of the Habana Libre, the smell of humidity seeps into your nose and damage piles up in the corners. / 14ymedioThe lobby, where a few decades ago Latin American guerrillas protected by the Havana regime and intellectuals from all over the world exchanged greetings, is now a nearly empty area. But it is the nearby shopping gallery, also located on the ground floor, that most honestly shows the state of the entire hotel: with leaks in the ceilings, closed shops and few lights, it scares away customers instead of attracting them.

Last December, Raúl stayed at the Habana Libre thanks to an invitation from some relatives who had emigrated. “I stayed on the 21st floor. The elevators are gloomy, it’s scary to get in them because they creak as they move. The rooms are very outdated, you can see that they haven’t invested in modernizing them, the carpets are stained and everything smells old,” he tells this newspaper. “To use the hot water, I had to take it easy because between turning on the sink and the water coming out, just a little warm, I spent a long time. One of my wishes was to take a break from the low pressure and cold water in my shower at home, but I didn’t find what I wanted.”

The air conditioning was also poor, but at least the mild Cuban winter kept Raul from sweating in his room. “The breakfast buffet was missing a million things,” complained the guest, who had planned a wide variety of fruits, cereals, cheeses and other combinations. Instead, he was met with a poor offering, a lot of monitoring by employees to ensure that customers did not serve themselves more than they should, and poor quality food.

“It has become like an empty shell, the period furniture, the stylish lamps and all that atmosphere of the 50s have been lost”

With only four stars – it recently lost one – the worst thing about the Habana Libre, according to Raúl, is the way the staff treats national guests. “The service was very bad, especially at the door. Every day they asked me if I was staying at the hotel and that made me feel very uncomfortable. If the employees don’t have the ability to memorize faces, it’s better for them to give guests a bracelet, because the other thing is pure harassment.”

The problem of leaks from the ceilings has affected not only the rooms. “You get water on your head, whether it’s on the terrace in the middle, in the hallways, in the Ambassadors’ lounge, in the Presidential lounge or in the Latin American lounge. They all have leaks,” Raúl continues. “The buffet table next to the pool was closed when I went, so I had to sneak some bread from breakfast to have as a snack while I was in that area.”

Those who think that this symbol of Havana could not be worse off are shocked by the nearby Riviera Hotel. Last year, when the diving board of the hotel’s swimming pool collapsed, many people realized the ruin that had taken over the building, founded in December 1957 by the Riviera Hotel Company, owned by the mobster Meyer Lansky. Lack of investment and years of excess had been undermining the building, which in its design combined luxury and comfort.

Details of the deterioration of the Riviera, considered one of the most modern and luxurious hotels in the world when it opened in 1957. / 14ymedio

This week, at the entrance to the Riviera, a security guard and a woman watering the lawn were the only “guests” in the hotel. Behind them, large, broken windows, giving a view of scaffolding covered in dust from a restoration process that has clearly stopped, give the impression that the hotel is closer to being demolished than to being restored. The ceramic-covered dome, which once covered the casino area, has been losing pieces and color due to the harsh salt of the nearby sea and lack of renovation.

Despite the damage, the Riviera still stands out for its spacious terraces, its rationalist style and a structure that allowed guests to enjoy the sea breeze and the views over the city. But, according to a tour guide who frequently visited the place, “it has become like an empty shell, the period furniture, the style lamps and all that atmosphere of the 50s have been lost and now with this closure even more so.”

In its heyday, the Chilean writer Jorge Edwards stayed there , sent in 1970 by Salvador Allende to reopen his country’s embassy and who would end up recounting his experience in Persona non grata, a devastating book about the Castro regime.

“The staff’s attention is not good and the supplies are very unstable, one day they give you something for breakfast and the next day there isn’t any more.”

“If Lansky comes back to life, he’ll either die again or have to rebuild the Riviera,” says the guide, who fondly remembers the hotel lobby, the gym, the smoking area and the pool area. “When you got on the diving board, you didn’t even want to jump into the water because from up there the spectacle was sublime. You could enjoy the sea so close, the breeze and the hotel itself, which looked spectacular from that position.”

The younger brother of the Habana Libre and the Riviera, the Colina hotel shares the path of deteriorating services with them. Also located in El Vedado, a few meters from the University of Havana, the accommodation reopened last January after a renovation process that has not left a good taste among those who knew it. “It is now managed by the state chain Isla Azul, which is one of the worst in Cuba,” says Marlén, who also visited the establishment before its repairs.

Discreet to the eye, the Colina hotel has 80 rooms and from the beginning attracted a mid-range clientele looking for its central location and amenities. At the end of the last century, after the dollarization of the Cuban economy, the ground floor was used by local musicians who were attracted by its intimate atmosphere and the type of guests who came to the place, many foreign professors and academics who wanted to be close to university classrooms.

Discreet to the eye, the Colina hotel has 80 rooms and from the beginning attracted a mid-range clientele looking for its central location and amenities. At the end of the last century, after the dollarization of the Cuban economy, the ground floor was used by local musicians who were attracted by its intimate atmosphere and the type of guests who came to the place, many foreign professors and academics who wanted to be close to university classrooms.

Discreet to the eye, the Colina hotel has 80 rooms and has attracted a mid-range clientele since its inception. / 14ymedio

The reopening of the building, however, has not meant the return of those cultural moments. The Colina hotel now has the same standardized and characterless image as all the other accommodations managed by Isla Azul. That bohemian atmosphere of its beginnings, where writers, troubadours and merchants from the provinces would gather around the bar, remains only in the minds of the oldest residents. Nor has the retouching seemed to have restored the good service that characterized the place.

“The staff is not very attentive and the supplies are very unstable. One day they serve you something for breakfast and the next day they don’t have it anymore,” says Marlén. The employee dedicated to tourism promotion is blunt when evaluating the current situation: “Cuba is saved by the views, the sunrises and the nature, but not by the hotels.”

Unlike what usually happens in the rest of the world, where historic buildings are restored – as is the case of the Riviera and the Habana Libre – the Cuban government is spending hundreds of millions of dollars on the construction of new, larger, luxury facilities, despite the pessimistic outlook for the tourism sector.

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

Power Cuts and Rationed Sales of Books Spoil the Havana Book Fair

’Cuentos negros de Cuba’, by Lydia Cabrera, will be presented two days before the closing ceremony

A group of soldiers in different uniforms participate in an event at the Fair. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, José Lassa/Juan Izquierdo, Havana, 15 February 2025 — Dozens of soldiers from the Armed Forces, in everyday uniform, entered this Saturday through the great gate of the Morro-Cabaña complex together with hundreds of Havana readers. The two colonial fortresses, whose walls were used for three centuries by firing squads and as a prison, serve every February as the venue for the Book Fair, held this year in the midst of a crippling energy crisis.

The most important cultural event of the year was inaugurated despite the total paralysis of the country this weekend. With several days of blackouts lasting more than 24 hours, climbing both castles was for Havana residents an escape from reality, rather than a love of reading. However, the fair has made mediocrity a habit and the sun, which reverberates off the pavement with a heat typical of August, makes the trip a torture.

The Fair’s directors were clear: to fill the pavilions, they had to “scrape” the warehouses of the Cuban Book Institute in search of copies printed even decades ago. New releases, only those that – thanks to the work and grace of the mules – are sold by individuals, with titles of dubious quality and always at exorbitant prices.

In the central pavilion, readers look for news under a warm blue canvas. / 14ymedio

For those who do want a book to take home, disappointment has been the rule for years. The pavilions have also been subject to rationing and only one copy per person can be taken home. The “star” of the event, the relaunch of the so-called Biblioteca del Pueblo, is for sale in a limited-edition: for 50 pesos, after much jostling and displeasure, one could buy a single copy of La Edad de Oro or Winnie the Pooh. continue reading

“It looks like a Spanish-Literature book from high school,” said a young woman who managed to “hunt down” Cuentos negros de Cuba by Lydia Cabrera, the most sought-after book at the event because it is by an author that Fidel Castro censored for decades.

Cabrera’s book is one of the 10 books on sale from the Biblioteca del Pueblo. Some will have presentations, like this one –on Friday, February 21, two days before the closing ceremony– at the José Martí Memorial, one of the sub-venues of the fair. “It is a book with special treatment,” commented the employee of Editorial Oriente.

It has become a habit to go to the Fair to get the school supplies that the children need. / 14ymedio

“This is nothing like what it used to be,” said an elderly woman who was leaving La Cabaña at full speed, with two school notebooks under her arm, at 11 in the morning. On the old drawbridge, others were waiting their turn to enter. “This is torture,” cried a woman who had already been waiting for 50 minutes in line under the overwhelming sun.

The guards are not bothered by the ever-increasing number of people gathering around the castle. Ready to withstand the siege, in uniform and immune to any pleas, they manage the line in dribs and drabs.

In the central tent – ​​where, in theory, the few new releases from the People’s Library are found – “there are only two cashiers, the others have not arrived due to transport.” That is the explanation that runs from voice to voice under the no less agonizing blue light of the canvas. Everyone wonders how a book industry can be financed whose most valuable opportunity to sell the product is wasted with little staff and few resources.

Nobody looks at what are jokingly known as “template copies,” those books that no one wants to buy because of their content – ​​generally memoirs of generals or anthologies of Fidel Castro.

The other “permanent” books are those brought by the embassies or the guest country of this years fair, South Africa, which are almost decorative or at prices that Cubans automatically discard. There were also pavilions for Venezuela, Guatemala, Vietnam, Iran and the Sahrawi Arab Republic.

To get to any stationery store you have to beat the lines and be patient. / 14ymedio

It has also become a habit to go to the Fair to get the school supplies that the children need and a box of crayons to pamper them. This year you can buy 10 notebooks at 250 pesos each. Erasers are 200 pesos. To get any of these stationery items you have to withstand the lines and be patient.

Readers feel the only place they can be at a book fair in the best-sellers pavilion. The language spoken there is the dollar. A novel by the American Stephen King or a Harry Potter volume – as well as countless self-help pamphlets – can cost almost 40 dollars. “13,000 pesos for a book!” translates one reader, bringing the price down to the humble national currency.

“It would have to be a special edition or hardcover to cost that much,” said a young woman, familiar with the book market abroad. “They sell you Stephen King books as if it were his latest success, and those books they are selling are 40 years old.”

When the tours of the castle esplanade are over, readers face the last challenge of the Fair: returning to Havana. The operation is, in fact, worthy of a King horror novel, and cannot be resolved even with all the magic of Harry Potter.

Returning to Havana from the Morro-Cabaña complex can become an overwhelming “adventure”. / 14ymedio

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

Closed for Two Months, Havana’s Iconic Coppelia Ice Cream Parlor Is Resurrected With New Prices of Between 30 and 40 Pesos per Scoop

The reopening hype was quickly quelled by the employees’ clarification that, due to the low availability of ice cream, only two specialties are now served per person.

The new prices have come, however, with a more careful service. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, José Lassa, Havana, 6 February 2025 — Coppelia is open! was the most common comment this Wednesday on the central corner of 23rd and L in Havana’s El Vedado neighborhood. The popular ice cream shop resumed service after more than two months in which supply problems and a remodeling forced it to close. The reopening has come, of course, with restrictions on the quantity served per customer and with a price increase.

A long line of customers, both curious and hopeful, waited this morning to enter the courts on the ground floor, either La Torre superior or the more select Las 4 Joyas where the menu boards announced the traditional combinations of the place: ensalada [a ‘salad’ in name only], three graces, super twins, white cow, pinto and prieta, jimaguas, harlequin and Sunday. The variety of flavors, although far from the dozens that the “cathedral of ice cream” displayed in its beginnings, was much greater than before the shutdown of the Coppelia factory, last December, due to lack of ammonia for the refrigeration system.

The reopening has come, however, with restrictions on the quantity served per customer and with a rise in prices. / 14ymedio

However, the hype about the reopening was quickly shut down by the employees’ clarification that, due to the low availability of ice cream, they are now only serving two specialties per person. The warning had already been made in the official press by Yeny González Ortiz, head of services at the Recreatur Company. continue reading

Another cold shower was the new prices, which, although still subsidized, have risen significantly compared to previous years. A scoop of ice cream, depending on the specialty and what it comes with, costs between 30 and 40 pesos, far from the 7 or 9 pesos it cost less than three years ago.

The popular salad, with five scoops and a couple of sweets, now costs 155 pesos, and if you want to add a donut or a tart, then you must add 50 or 75 pesos, respectively. / 14ymedio

The popular ’salad’, with five scoops and a couple of sweets, now costs 155 pesos, and if you want to add a donut or a tart, you have to add 50 or 75 pesos, respectively. The new prices have come, however, with more careful service. “At least they are serving cold water and everything looks a little cleaner,” acknowledged a young woman who opted for a ’Three Graces’ of chocolate, vanilla and strawberry.

Another cold shower was the new prices, which, although still subsidized, have risen significantly compared to previous years. / 14ymedio

“The ice cream is solid and I haven’t found any ice chunks yet,” added an elderly man, surprised by a quality that, he suspected, “might not last long.” The experience of having fewer services and fewer menu items after opening a restaurant surfaced on Wednesday in the form of anecdotes and predictions.

In the outdoor areas, covered with awnings, and also in Las 4 Joyas, the payment method is exclusively through the electronic gateways EnZona and Transfermóvil, while in the rest of the indoor premises, payment can also be made in cash.

Through the window, right next to their table, the couple an see the Torre K, the luxury hotel that is about to open and where ice cream will not be paid for in Cuban pesos nor will it be rationed. / 14ymedio

In the parking lot area there are two points of sale offering ice cream cones for those customers who are in a hurry and do not want to wait in long lines. Meanwhile, on the upper floor, La Torre, two young people were trying a combination of pineapple and chocolate swirl ice cream on Wednesday. Through the window, right next to their table, you can see the Torre K, the luxury hotel that is about to open and where ice cream will not be paid for in Cuban pesos nor will it be rationed.

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

In Havana: Cubans ‘Didn’t Talk Much About José Martí, the Torch March Was About Trump’

As every January, detours and road closures caused chaos in Havana’s traffic

With a large number of military personnel marching, the predominant color in the ceremony was the olive green of the Armed Forces. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Jorge Lassa, Havana, 28 January 2025 — A wave of olive-green caps flooded the steps of the University of Havana on Monday night. At the foot of the famous statue of the Alma Mater – once a symbol of education and civility on the island – Army officers and cadets shouted their way through the crowd, which was preparing to begin the Torch March.

In Miguel Díaz-Canel’s Havana, very little remains of the Martí symbolism that inspired the first march in January 1953. At that time, a group of university students, including Fidel Castro – who claimed the idea of ​​the candles came from the future cultural commissioner Alfredo Guevara – and his brother Raúl, invented a ceremony with religious overtones to remember José Martí on his centenary.

Now, Havana residents are clear that the focus of the March is on the North. “They didn’t talk much about Martí, they talked about Trump and the list of countries sponsoring terrorism,” a disappointed young woman from the Federation of University Students (FEU) told 14ymedio, as she joined the rapid exodus at the end of the ceremony. The slogan for this occasion says it all: “always anti-imperialist.”

At the foot of the famous statue of the Alma Mater, officers and cadets of the Army shouted their way into the crowd. / 14ymedio

Instead of the torch with sharp nails that Raúl Castro supposedly held that night – they were expecting Fulgencio Batista’s repression, which never came – what was waved this Monday was a puny Cuban flag. It is enough to look at photos of past marches to see the decline of the nonagenarian general, as consumed by decades in power as Ramiro Valdés or José Ramón Machado Ventura, who escorted it yesterday. This is the 72nd march that he has attended. continue reading

The March turned Havana into total chaos for several hours. “There was too much traffic detour. I think they went too far,” another of the young people who had a hard time getting to the university esplanade told this newspaper. “From Boyeros and Carlos III there were already caballitos (police cars) directing traffic. When you went down G you couldn’t turn right at either 25th or 23rd. It was almost when I got to Línea that I was able to turn right. They had ‘reserved’ several blocks.”

As usual, shoes and shirts remain from the march, burned by the fire that falls to the pavement. / 14ymedio

In a country that has been mired in a worrying fuel crisis for over a year, there was no shortage of means to transport the students who were going to participate in the event. The caravan of vehicles stretched along 23rd Street in El Vedado.

Since this was, in theory – and despite the strong military presence – a university event, the main attendees were students from the University of Havana, the Sports Institute (Inder), the Technological University (Cujae) and the University of Computer Sciences (UCI). A student from the Rosalía Abreu pre-university in Cerro told this newspaper that he attended because he was one of the “five who ‘got hooked’ for each classroom.”

“A friend of mine came too,” he added. “At least we went out, bought a bottle and walked around after the march.”

The piles of torches used during the march end up in the streets and landfills of Havana. / 14ymedio

The students were greeted on the esplanade by a heated atmosphere in which the usual voices predominated – through loudspeakers: Buena Fe, Silvio Rodríguez, Sara González, Pablo Milanés. The voice of Annie Garcés – the singer who, despite the sponsorship of the regime, does not connect with Cubans – frightened many of those who were waiting for the start of the march.

Cadets from the Armed Forces and the Ministry of the Interior – some of them completely disregarding their uniforms, to emphasize the “informality” of the call – cordoned off the area, whose buildings had been recently painted, even those that are in danger of collapse.

Cadets from the Armed Forces and the Ministry of the Interior, some of them completely disregarding their uniforms, cordoned off the area. / 14ymedio

Until the speeches, the scene was that of a party, with dancing and drinking. The media speak of “thousands of young people” in the march, but the escapes in every street or corner quickly decimated the procession. “There were people who left on L Street,” near the university itself, one of the “escaped” confessed to 14ymedio.

“In the past, at 7:00 pm there was not room for a single person more in the square,” he added. “Now, nobody cares that Raúl and Díaz-Canel were there.” As usual, there are burnt shoes and shirts from the march, which accidentally fell on the pavement. There are also piles of cans strung on sticks, stinking of gasoline, thrown into the streets of El Vedado. These are the remains of the “Martí torches.”

Between blackouts and shortages, the general mood is not one for ceremonies. So much so that the headline on the front page of Granma this Tuesday – which shows Havana illuminated with powerful LED lights, through whose streets the top brass of the regime marches – sounds like a joke or a protest: “The light that Cuba always needs.”