Cuba Journal Offers Internship Award through UI Hemingway Festival

Cuba Journal Offers Internship Award through UI Hemingway Festival

The Cuba Journal is partnering with the University of Idaho Hemingway Festival to award an internship. This year’s seventh annual Hemingway Festival celebrates Ernest Hemingway’s connection to Cuba and the reinvigorated U.S.-Cuba political relationship. It is also the 65th anniversary of the writing of “The Old Man and the Sea.” The Cuba Journal is offering … Read more

After 3-Year Restoration, the Historic Gran Teatro Reopens in Havana

After 3-Year Restoration, the Historic Gran Teatro Reopens in Havana

After three years of intense restoration efforts, Raul Castro and other Cuban officials celebrated the reopening of the historic Gran Teatro de La Habana “Alicia Alonso” at a gala on Friday marking the 57th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution. Castro attended the rededication gala in the Gran Teatro’s Federico Garcia Lorca Hall alongside famed Cuban ballerina … Read more

Author Robert Stone Reveals Havana’s Impact on his Writing

Author Robert Stone Reveals Havana’s Impact on his Writing

According to the New York State Writers Institute, Robert Stone’s novels often feature alienated protagonists who struggle to survive in a brutal world of violence, drugs, and alcohol. A Hall of Mirrors (1967), Stone’s first novel, won the William Faulkner Award for best first novel and was also produced by Paramount as the movie WUSA … Read more

How To Study Abroad in Cuba in 2016

How To Study Abroad in Cuba in 2016

Cuba’s relatively low crime rate and national priority on education has resulted in a surge in interest for study abroad opportunities for Americans. The island nation’s tropical climate and stunning architecture add to the allure for students seeking a unique experience without having to travel thousands of miles from home. President Obama’s announcement that the … Read more

Letter from a Changing Cuba: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back?

by Tim Weed, Cuba Journal Contributor Each trip to Cuba is like a freeze-frame in time-lapse photo sequence, illuminating a particular moment in a long timeline of change. Lately the process seems to have accelerated. The country is like seedling whose growth used to be barely perceptible, but is now sprouting leaves and branches at … Read more

10 Facts About Hemingway in Cuba

As Cuba and the US conclude a year of relationship therapy, one bright spot that has endured through the years is the connection Hemingway forged with Cuba while living and writing there for more than 30 years. The island nation played such an important role in Hemingway’s life that he wrote seven books in Cuba, … Read more

The Music in Cuba’s Christmas Celebration

Cuba’s Christmas celebration is changing as a reflection of a broader evolution for Cuba to animate its past and invent a future. Christmas Eve remains overshadowed among Cubans by the New Years’ celebration – which happens to coincide with the day of the 1959 revolution – although many Cubans get together with their families for … Read more

In Conversation: Renowned Boutique Hotel Designer Discusses Cuba’s Hotel Future

In Conversation: Renowned Boutique Hotel Designer Discusses Cuba’s Hotel Future

The Cuba Journal selected the Hotel Saratoga as the 2015 Best Hotel in Havana.

Across the street from the Capital building and next to La Habana Vieja (Old Havana), the hotel offers ideal access to the best parts of Havana, day or night.

I had the pleasure of meeting members of the design team at the Mexican design and architect firm, Arquitectura de Interiores, the designer of the Hotel Saratoga during its extensive 2005 renovation. The firm’s President, Marisabel Gomez Vazquez, and Creative Director, Joao Lueiro (a Cuban living in Mexico), agreed to discuss the Saratoga and Cuba’s potential to impact the course of design evolution in the boutique hotel category.

The Hotel Saratoga is a wonderful combination of classical and modern in terms of design. Can you discuss how this came about, whether it was the goal at the beginning or did it result after working with the space? Do you feel like you were taking big risks at the time?

The Hotel Saratoga has a history of its own. Apart from being one of the first full-service hotels in Havana, quite luxurious by the way, it was also, during the 30’s, the watering hole for many in the bohemian-intellectual class in Havana. It was very common to find writers, actors and socialites spending time at the “Aires Libres”. This site, the long arched Portal at both sides of the main entry on the hotel, was made famous while the Anacaonas, the first Cuban all-women orchestra, were rising into stardom playing there. It is impossible to bypass these credentials. Once you get your hands in a project like this you can’t escape the spell. When we started the project it was intended to be a “One&Only”, so we knew it had to comply with the standards set by this brand. We also studied the history in a comprehensive manner and learned a good load of interesting facts. However we didn’t pretend to re-create the ambiance of the original property but to accomplish instead a new standard for the Cuban hospitality business based upon Cuban authenticity and our knowledge in contemporary requirements for the industry. The result is this mix of classical and modern features that made the property a success story from the opening day. Our biggest achievement was the acknowledgements from Cubans themselves; they felt it as a very consistent and respectful project. We as a firm visualize every project through their intrinsic values in all fronts, cultural, historic and market wise. This permits us to navigate all the different scenarios from the inside, not imposing our position but constructing it from the core. When a project like the Hotel Saratoga lands into our hands we always run into some risks, mainly from the cultural point of view, but we are well prepared to sort them out. In our creative process we have time allocated for establishing the common language, to listen and to understand. This opens the communication and everything is easier then.

In a sense, Cuba’s history is colliding with its future as culture and economics combine to create exciting possibilities. Do you see this historical circumstance producing more successful hotel concepts in Cuba that bridge the past and the future or classical and modern?

This is not new. Geographically and culturally, Cuba is a crossroads. It has been a hub for many centuries. Sometimes it has been natural, like when the colonial Spanish ships arrived first in Havana then went to Mexico and South America. It was named the Gulf Key for its strategic position. During most of the 20th century it was a commercial port of transit enjoying such prosperity that it became a magnet for immigrants from the former metropolis. And then, during the years under the influence of the socialist bloc, there was an influx of Russian, German, Czech, Hungarian and many more people from Eastern Europe adding, again, an unexpected layer of consequences. So Cuba is accustomed to the new and unknown and it has survived each wave. This moment brings a broad range of openings. The idea of exploiting the historic background makes sense in Havana and other cities with rich colonial architecture. But there are big prospects for contemporary, avant-garde design not only in Havana but in many places through the country. Cuba is a rather big market and there are a lot of opportunities for almost every concept.

Since the opening of the Hotel Saratoga in 2005, boutique hotels have emerged as a discrete hotel category with some of the world’s largest hotel companies forming brands around the concept. Yet few places in the world offer a backdrop like the architectural richness of Old Havana and the nearby neoclassical Vedado residential section. Do you think Havana could shape the future of the boutique hotel milieu as the concept spreads into places that lack the special features or the historical circumstance found in Havana?

Havana is a big city, yet it feels close and personal. It is something that happens in culturally rich cities like Mexico or Buenos Aires. If you can take advance on these characteristics you can create a boutique hotel. This is a convenient scheme for the large hotel companies to bring intimacy to travelers looking for a unique experience.

When I walk into the entrance of the Hotel Saratoga I feel acquainted with a sense Cuba’s history and also with Havana’s treasury of historical events – some of which occurred close to the building itself. Do you think this sensation can be duplicated in any physical location or is it fortified by a city’s own unique location and circumstance?

The scenarios can be duplicated however the feelings and authenticity wouldn’t be easy to replicate. You can create a copy of Venice, yet you will not go to Vegas to pray in San Marco. You need several factors to create something as authentic as the original: objective ones can be copied but subjective ones, those involving feelings are very hard to create out of the nothing. Thereafter, the actual feelings you have in Havana belong in Havana.

Do you have plans for more design and architectural work in Cuba?

It is our goal and desire. We are always looking for new opportunities to work in Cuba for the great development chapter to come; but, more importantly, we already have a love affair with the country and its people.

Cuba’s growing hotel pipeline is trending towards upscale offerings in the urban city center and in the all-inclusive category mostly in Veradero. How do you see this trend impacting the rest of the Caribbean over the next few years?

The well established markets and niche products are not going to be very affected, but the new offers will be harder to sell. While everything takes shape and the infrastructure gets updated there are chances for the minor players; after that, it will be difficult for them to compete because Cuba is very diverse and as a touristic product has a lot to offer in a single package.

Hemingway’s Life in Cuba Profiled in Bipoic – Debuts at Havana Film Festival

Ernest Hemingway biopic Papa premiers today as part of Cuba’s 37th International Festival of New Latin Cinema, Variety reports. Last month, the film won “Best Narrative” award at the Key West Film Festival. Papa, based on a true story, follows journalist Ed Myers (Giovanni Ribisi) on his adventure to Cuba during the time period preceding … Read more