The Asian Age

Havana looks to put a modern stamp on its 500- year history

- Moises Avila

Havana: Havana could be compared to the colourful 1950s classic American cars that fill its roads: an object of desire for historians and tourists alike.

To walk through its streets is to take a step back in time.

Run- down homes show signs of salt erosion as waves from the Caribbean Sea batter away at the city’s seawall, while at the day’s end the setting sun paints the sky orange.

Despite the visual signs of deteriorat­ion, Havana is spirituall­y alive.

The Cuban capital will celebrate 500 years in 2019, with an urban restoratio­n plan aiming to give space to modernity while maintainin­g respect for its vintage character.

“Havana remains frozen in time. The revolution’s aims were to look after the country,” city historian Eusebio Leal, who’s in charge of restoring the historic centre, told AFP.

“Undeniably there’s been a cost. When you go around you can see the city’s damaged and covered by a veil of decadence.”

“There have been no new bridges or wide avenues built in the city, there are no traffic problems and there have been no widescale demolition­s like in other Latin American cities.”

But Leal insists the city has much greater depth than simple aesthetic beauty.

“Havana is not just a romantic ruin, nor a city of classic American cars, or a city of dancers and palm trees. It’s a city of intense culture,” he said.

“What’s surprising is that there isn’t enough time to sample the cultural life that extends from ballet festivals to book festivals, from historic cities to jazz.

“And its plastic arts are amongst the most desired in the world by collectors.”

The neo- baroque Great Theatre of Havana Alicia Alonso, home to the National Ballet and guarded by marble statues, and the majestic Capitolio building with its impressive cupola really stand out, as does the music that greets visitors on every street corner.

But the landscape has started to change, not least since the country eased open its doors to foreign investment, with luxury stores and “capitalist” brands, restaurant­s and hotels slipping into historic buildings and sharing public space with damp, old rooftop terraces and colonial- style balconies.

“Over the last decade, Havana has seen an injection of large private initiative­s... Which has given rise to an architectu­ral renaissanc­e and creation of jobs,” said Leal.

The admittance of private enterprise has had a dramatic effect, with 13 per cent of the labour force now employed in the private sector.

Private hospitals and restaurant­s cater to tourist demands.

One of the oldest cities in the Americas, Havana was a modern metropolis at the start of the 20th century but also a haven for mafia organisati­ons.

Following the 1959 socialist revolution, a spiritual cleansing saw the proliferat­ion of brothels and casinos consigned to history, but physically the city was neglected.

Its streets are poorly maintained and badly lit, but Havana is a much safer city than many other Latin American metropolis­es. In 2017, it attracted 4.5 million tourists.

“Havana is a joyous and fun city and its people are welcoming and caring. It’s a place where I feel safe wandering its streets,” Brazilian tourist Debora Naves, 41, said.

 ?? — AFP ?? Havana could be compared to the colorful 1950s classic American cars that fill its roads.
— AFP Havana could be compared to the colorful 1950s classic American cars that fill its roads.

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