Cuba Between Hotels and Rubble

Tones (Hotel Iberostar Grand Packard). Photos: José Leandro Garbey.

Cuba Between Hotels and Rubble

14 / julio / 2022

Cuba’s hotel industry was one of the sectors hardest hit by COVID-19. While the number of foreign visitors has grown in 2022 – 564,847 up until May, compared to the 88,239 the previous year -, these figures are still far off pre-pandemic levels. 

Official statistics published by the Cuban Office of Statistics and Information (ONEI) reveal that investments in Business services, property and rentals in 2019 represented 38.5% of total investments in the country; while, in 2020, this figure rose to 45.6%.

Cuban economist Pedro Monreal explained on Twitter that “not every investment in business services, property and rentals is an investment in tourism, but every tourism investment under a property scheme is included in this category. There are no exact figures, but it’s reasonable to assume that it’s mostly tourism investment.

Raising roofs

An article by Prensa Latina reports that Cuba has a housing deficit of approximately 900,000 houses, including the need for new-builds and renovations. As a result, the Government put the Housing Program into action, since 2019, to counteract the situation over a 10-year period. The official news agency also points out that only 18,645 homes were built last year, falling short of the annual plan target by 42%. “During these times of crisis, the Cuban Government has shown where its priorities lie: in 2021, they added 4,000 new rooms for international tourism which, were all valued at 660 million USD,” an article published by El Toque states. Every room would have cost approximately 165,000 USD.

Monreal says that rooms in 5-star hotels went from being 37.3% of the total to 46.9% between 2014 and 2020. “Approximately 12,500 luxury rooms have been built in six years, despite the number of guests falling since before the pandemic.”

As tourism investments increase and the dependence on that industry, problems in transport and the energy sector are also on the rise. The only thing growing in Cuba is the number of rooms in empty hotels. It doesn’t make sense with the tremendous housing shortage.

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The Cuban economy has tourism as one of its main sources of foreign currency (Hotel Deauville).

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Despite falling numbers of foreign visitors to Cuba, hotel facilities continue to be built.

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Investments in hotel infrastructure contrast with those made in other sectors that demand an urgent injection of resources, such as agriculture and domestic trade.

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Site of the demolished Moscow restaurant, where a tourist facility will be built.

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The Moscow building - located on the central corner of 23rd and P Streets - remained in a dreadful structural state for decades.

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Hotel Torre K structure, just a few meters from the iconic Habana Libre.

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Facilities with high historic value such as the Kid Chocolate Multipurpose Hall - located in front of Havana’s Capitolio - have become “victims” of the expansion of tourism on the island.

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Scaffolding on the Corona, a hotel under construction located next to Revolution Palace.

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Many homes in a damaged building state surround the Corona Hotel (on the corner of Morro and Refugio Streets).

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Conflicting realities coexist just a few meters apart.

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Homes next to the Paseo del Prado Hotel.

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Investments in hotel infrastructure contrast with those made in other sectors that demand an urgent injection of resources, such as agriculture and domestic trade.

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Amidst the current economic crisis, experts put forward the need to drag out investments in tourism to encourage growth in other economic sectors.

This article was translated into English from the original in Spanish.
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