Cuba Holidays have all the romance you would expect in such a legendary hotbed of Latin culture. Old Havana is much as it was when Ernest Hemingway sipped his Mojitos in La Bodeguita: old colonial buildings, cruising Cadillacs and cigar chomping old men sitting in cafes.
Where to go
The Capitolio Nacional: The Capitolio Nacional is a huge domed building in the centre of Havana and a scale model of its more famous cousin in Washington. You will love wandering through the sheer variety of the halls, corridors and passageways of the Capitolio Nacional. The terrace bar is well worth a short break, where you can seat and watch the world go by.
El Floridita became the most famous bar in Havana, and the most famous in the world. In 1953, "Esquire" magazine, called it one the world's seven best bars, along with, the Pied Piper bar in San Francisco, the Ritz in Paris and London, Raffles in Singapore, Club 21 in New York and the bar at the Shellbourne Hotel in Dublin. El Floridita and it's Daiquri have been immortalized in literature on more than one occasion. Perhaps the best description was written by Hemingway himself, in "Islands in the Stream".
La Cabana Fortress: Up on a hill at the east of the City of Havana, coming down the rim at the entrance of Havana Bay and some 300 meters from the Three Morro Kings Castle, lies the largest fortress in America: San Carlos de la Caba?a. La Caba?a, with its 750 meters long and ten hectares of surface, was considered as the summit of the fortification system of the Spanish military constructions.
Partagas Cigar Factory: Located on the Industria street No. 520, in Old Havana, always had that beautiful colonial building as venue. It is the oldest cigar factory of Cuba and there, emerged the figure of the tobacco reader, profession that still exits aimed at reading aloud to workers.
The Paseo del Prado is one of the prettiest main streets in the old part of the city. It begins at the Central Park Hotel and leads down to the seafront known as the Malecon, which gives this avenue its reputation. A wide walkway lined with trees and stone benches bisects the street, while in either side you can see the columns and arches of the mostly residential neocolonial balcony buildings, painted in a whole host of colors.
Where to go
The Capitolio Nacional: The Capitolio Nacional is a huge domed building in the centre of Havana and a scale model of its more famous cousin in Washington. You will love wandering through the sheer variety of the halls, corridors and passageways of the Capitolio Nacional. The terrace bar is well worth a short break, where you can seat and watch the world go by.
El Floridita became the most famous bar in Havana, and the most famous in the world. In 1953, "Esquire" magazine, called it one the world's seven best bars, along with, the Pied Piper bar in San Francisco, the Ritz in Paris and London, Raffles in Singapore, Club 21 in New York and the bar at the Shellbourne Hotel in Dublin. El Floridita and it's Daiquri have been immortalized in literature on more than one occasion. Perhaps the best description was written by Hemingway himself, in "Islands in the Stream".
La Cabana Fortress: Up on a hill at the east of the City of Havana, coming down the rim at the entrance of Havana Bay and some 300 meters from the Three Morro Kings Castle, lies the largest fortress in America: San Carlos de la Caba?a. La Caba?a, with its 750 meters long and ten hectares of surface, was considered as the summit of the fortification system of the Spanish military constructions.
Partagas Cigar Factory: Located on the Industria street No. 520, in Old Havana, always had that beautiful colonial building as venue. It is the oldest cigar factory of Cuba and there, emerged the figure of the tobacco reader, profession that still exits aimed at reading aloud to workers.
The Paseo del Prado is one of the prettiest main streets in the old part of the city. It begins at the Central Park Hotel and leads down to the seafront known as the Malecon, which gives this avenue its reputation. A wide walkway lined with trees and stone benches bisects the street, while in either side you can see the columns and arches of the mostly residential neocolonial balcony buildings, painted in a whole host of colors.
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Before booking your holidays to Cuba. Visit www.quest2cuba.co.uk for more information on the best Cuba tours.
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