Dubai Telegraph - Cuba's historic homes teeter on brink as economy collapses

EUR -
AED 4.265511
AFN 73.759117
ALL 94.834392
AMD 427.665871
ANG 2.079503
AOA 1065.652572
ARS 1668.732285
AUD 1.643515
AWG 2.090649
AZN 1.971915
BAM 1.957286
BBD 2.340477
BDT 142.649528
BGN 1.96391
BHD 0.43799
BIF 3473.962138
BMD 1.161472
BND 1.48873
BOB 8.059119
BRL 5.927801
BSD 1.162082
BTN 109.829383
BWP 15.570821
BYN 3.217243
BYR 22764.847176
BZD 2.337174
CAD 1.625579
CDF 2694.614268
CHF 0.920925
CLF 0.02614
CLP 1028.785421
CNY 7.848587
CNH 7.846491
COP 3989.829836
CRC 529.301848
CUC 1.161472
CUP 30.779003
CVE 110.745588
CZK 24.150948
DJF 206.417103
DKK 7.475546
DOP 68.06758
DZD 154.336767
EGP 58.206578
ERN 17.422077
ETB 183.948087
FJD 2.594381
FKP 0.865151
GBP 0.864919
GEL 3.072086
GGP 0.865151
GHS 13.130775
GIP 0.865151
GMD 84.787614
GNF 10194.814454
GTQ 8.857801
GYD 243.084551
HKD 9.097866
HNL 31.007312
HRK 7.536329
HTG 151.765221
HUF 349.429252
IDR 20681.515218
ILS 3.386504
IMP 0.865151
INR 110.210723
IQD 1521.528051
IRR 1597023.717995
ISK 144.42914
JEP 0.865151
JMD 183.789534
JOD 0.823514
JPY 186.316925
KES 150.318207
KGS 101.57136
KHR 4660.403313
KMF 493.625206
KPW 1045.325022
KRW 1753.723668
KWD 0.357908
KYD 0.968435
KZT 566.705366
LAK 25587.223779
LBP 104009.798906
LKR 389.308917
LRD 211.562005
LSL 18.805889
LTL 3.429525
LVL 0.702563
LYD 7.404386
MAD 10.737861
MDL 20.278395
MGA 4878.181346
MKD 61.669873
MMK 2438.395525
MNT 4154.078175
MOP 9.375918
MRU 46.551548
MUR 54.867595
MVR 17.956001
MWK 2016.31477
MXN 19.988198
MYR 4.725911
MZN 74.213816
NAD 18.824575
NGN 1579.27594
NIO 42.521185
NOK 10.999253
NPR 175.725899
NZD 1.991564
OMR 0.446588
PAB 1.162082
PEN 3.963534
PGK 5.096248
PHP 69.943807
PKR 323.241355
PLN 4.239318
PYG 7091.383811
QAR 4.22834
RON 5.231308
RSD 117.363266
RUB 84.209268
RWF 1728.270031
SAR 4.357719
SBD 9.363117
SCR 15.612124
SDG 697.464888
SEK 10.870987
SGD 1.488887
SHP 0.867156
SLE 28.746434
SLL 24355.487055
SOS 663.780312
SRD 43.360049
STD 24040.121148
STN 24.855496
SVC 10.167807
SYP 128.379914
SZL 18.821606
THB 37.757707
TJS 10.772378
TMT 4.076766
TND 3.381916
TOP 2.796546
TRY 53.796935
TTD 7.893993
TWD 36.678005
TZS 3043.053794
UAH 52.04426
UGX 4299.264021
USD 1.161472
UYU 46.916023
UZS 13943.468665
VES 692.279465
VND 30546.708201
VUV 138.060614
WST 3.183845
XAF 656.455384
XAG 0.016555
XAU 0.000268
XCD 3.138936
XCG 2.094372
XDR 0.817325
XOF 656.231464
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.156207
ZAR 18.79093
ZMK 10454.642197
ZMW 20.539594
ZWL 373.993444
  • CMSC

    0.0250

    22.365

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    62.87

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.0300

    71.56

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    0.7100

    82.28

    +0.86%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    23.82

    -0.92%

  • RIO

    -0.1500

    105.74

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    -0.0100

    52.22

    -0.02%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.81

    +0.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.26

    -0.27%

  • AZN

    1.4400

    178.71

    +0.81%

  • BTI

    0.3200

    61.38

    +0.52%

  • RYCEF

    0.4800

    18.59

    +2.58%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    32.8

    -0.12%

  • BP

    -0.4400

    41.15

    -1.07%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    14.89

    -0.74%

Cuba's historic homes teeter on brink as economy collapses
Cuba's historic homes teeter on brink as economy collapses / Photo: YAMIL LAGE - AFP

Cuba's historic homes teeter on brink as economy collapses

In Havana's old town, to walk on the pavement rather than the middle of the street is to take your life into your hands.

Text size:

The ornate stone balconies of the decaying colonial townhouses jutting above your head are liable to collapse at any moment.

Tens of thousands of people housed in these monuments to pre-revolutionary Cuba, which were subdivided into apartments after Fidel Castro took power in 1959, live on the edge, literally.

In the densely populated Centro Habana district, a storm brought down the stone staircase, leading from the ground to the upper floors, in the neo-classical pink 1920s tenement where Marnie Estevez lives.

Estevez, her husband, two daughters, mother and 97-year-old grandmother were left perched on the third floor, with no way out.

"The fire service had to come and get my grandmother down with a crane," Estevez told AFP in the tiny two-roomed apartment that she, her husband and children have moved into on the first floor.

Her mother and grandmother are still living in a hostel seven years later -- just two of the many thousands of people evacuated from ruined buildings to cramped temporary lodgings.

In nearby Habana Vieja, the historic city center, nine families who decamped from a collapsed building three years ago are still living in a boxing gym.

Each family lives between four walls of cardboard surrounded by sheets held up by wires and sticks for privacy.

With Cuba's economy buckling five months into a US-imposed fuel blockade, and the national housing deficit running to over 900,000 units, authorities say a quick fix is unlikely.

"It looks very difficult, given the situation," said Dayana Garcia, a mother who is raising three children in the gym.

- 'No money to fix anything' -

Across Havana, the ravages of time, lack of maintenance and overcrowding is writ large in the facades of one of the best preserved colonial cities in the Americas.

Habana Vieja, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is home to around 900 listed buildings, some dating back to the early years of Spanish rule in the 16th century.

But in some cases, blue skies can be seen through the facades, making the decaying structures look like theater props.

Between 2000 and 2013, a total of 3,856 buildings collapsed -- nearly one a day -- according to the Office of the City Historian, which is responsible for maintaining listed buildings.

By 2020, around 37 percent of the country's residential buildings were deemed unsafe.

"Havana is falling down," Estevez's 64-year-old mother Leodiska Canino said flatly.

"There is no money here to fix anything," she added.

In the gym, electrical wires snake across the floor to each family's cardboard home, but there is no running water and the heat under the zinc roof is stifling.

The thud of fists walloping punching bags reverberates through the gym from morning until evening.

"This is not a life," one of the relocated mothers grumbled.

- An absent government -

The fortunes of Havana's colonial buildings mirror that of the nearly seven-decade-old revolution, their peeling pastel-colored facades are symbols of the repeated crises that have rocked the island, and its surprising resilience.

Some buildings were spruced up as part of a tourism drive launched in the 1990s, which peaked in the years following the landmark 2016 visit by former US President Barack Obama.

In others, like the one in which Estevez lives, the balconies and upper floors are propped up by wooden stilts.

The 43-year-old, who minds children and elderly people for a living, tries her best to patch up her apartment but worries about the cracks in the walls.

Garcia, the 35-year-old mother living in the gym, is concerned for the health of her children, one of whom has developed a lung infection because of exposure to damp.

She bitterly accuses Cuba's communist authorities of abandoning them to their fate.

"Nobody from the government comes here...not even to see how we are, if we're alive or dead."

A.El-Ahbaby--DT