Architectural Digest: 1958 Edition

Given that the last time I saw the southern port city Cienfuegos was fifty-one years ago, when I was thirteen years old, my memories of it proved to be amazingly vivid. 

I recalled that my maternal grandmother and my spinster aunt lived in a traditional home near El Prado, the town's main boulevard, and around the corner from a drugstore and the Pujol Funeral Home. When there was a big wake, I recall, the mourners' eerie hubbub wafted over the interior courtyards of the houses in the block and into my grandmother's living room.

Next door to my grandmother and aunt lived my uncle Arturo, with his wife and two children. Arturo and his wife América then moved to a custom-built house in Punta Gorda, a rather swanky neighborhood on a narrow finger of land that poked into Cienfuegos' huge harbor.

Even as a child the house had an impact on me. Almost a vision. Far out. Awesome. A roof jutting out to the sky in the shape of a "V," instead of the other way around like normal houses. Nothing like it in Cienfuegos, a beautiful but quite conventional city adorned mostly by colonial and European architecture.

In 1961 Cienfuegos briefly made the news because it's located roughly sixty miles east of the Bay of Pigs. Ten years later Cuba and the Soviet Union began building a nuclear power plant, later abandoned though its hulking concrete shell is still visible from Punta Gorda. Given the subsequent accidents at Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima, the day that nuclear plant was abandoned was a lucky one for the 165,000 residents of Cienfuegos.

When we spotted Arturo's house during our visit three weeks ago it was more than a vision, almost a hallucination. Not only was the house still standing but it was intact, inside and out, including a 1957 Chevy sitting in the garage, also intact, with its unmistakable tail wings poking up, almost echoing the roofline of the house.



My uncle, who evidently was a guy of some means, in 1958 hired a Havana architect last-named Carbonell to build if not quite a mansion, certainly a luxurious home. All the furnishings inside were custom designed and crafted, in the modernist style of the era. Practically all of the house, inside and out, remains the same, lovingly--almost obsessively--maintained first by my uncle, who died 1992, and now by one of his grandsons, nicknamed Juanchi, and his wife Norma.

Yep, it's the original Westinghouse electric oven. It still works.  
All basic fixtures are original, including the Formica countertop,
with built-in electric stove burners. 

Come into my living room: Would you like a rum-and-coke?
The TV remotes are new but the rest
of this bedroom set is from 1958. 

The miracle of this house is that there are so few like it left in Cuba in such good condition.

Though a distinctive modernist residential style flourished Cuba during the 1950s, most of the owners fled the country following Castro's victory in 1959 and then the government confiscated all that real estate.

And as Cuba skidded from one economic crisis to another there was little money to spend on their upkeep much less restoration. Many of the homes were turned over to poor families, and fell victim to shabby subdivisions and further abuse.

I suspect there was also a certain element of schadenfreude and class warfare involved in the government's policy of neglect. Think of it: Houses formerly inhabited by the rich were now turned over the poor. Modernist homes became a symbol of the exploitative old days before Castro.

Considering Cuba's architectural genealogy--which consists mostly of colonial, inward-looking homes, with clay  roofs, elaborate floor tiling, central courtyards, and twenty- to thirty-foot-high ceilings, and later, European-derivative styles, including art-deco--the modernist style of the 1950s was a radical departure.

The 1950s homes were low-slung and flat roofed. Jalousie windows, sometimes made of glass slats, as in my uncle's home, dominated the exterior, almost inviting passersby to peek at the inside. Porches  dominated the facades. Instead of symmetrical details, these homes seemed to be constructed of blocs, often brightly painted and stacked next to each other like giant Lego pieces. Grids, round planter boxes, angled pillars and other whimsical details prevailed.

Some of this minimalist influence probably blew in from Europe and the less-is-more style of architect Mies van der Rohe and others, which also influenced tropical home design in Miami and South Florida.

Yet the Cuban houses to me somehow seemed distinctly Cuban.

My uncle's house has walls of glass jalousie windows at both ends, presumably to facilitate cross-ventilation. As wealthy as he may have been there was only one air conditioner, in the bedroom. The eaves are extra-wide to shield the interior from the scorching tropical sun and the torrential rains. The layout is utterly straightforward. The floors are white, foot-square glazed tiles.

These homes' simplicity and sturdy construction ultimately may be what saves them. They're all concrete, with little wood to rot or stone carvings to crumble. In Havana, many of the grander mansions also have been sold off as foreign embassies or housing for their personnel.

Still, the rampant weeds and the mold creeping up the walls of most of these houses, and the trashing and looting of their interiors, is a damn shame--regardless of how you may feel about Castro's revolution or the eternal conflict between the haves an have-nots.

More houses from Uncle Arturo's neighborhood



This house is next to my cousin's. It's holding its own though
not as meticulously maintained. 

This is a curious collection of six small houses in Cienfuegos,
each named for one of the provinces of Cuba at the time. 

This house is in Havana, around the corner from the home of
another set of relatives where we stayed, in the still-posh
neighborhood of Miramar. It was built, I was told,
by the wife of former dictator Fulgencio Batista.
It's been taken over by squatters and pretty much destroyed. 

These last two houses are in Santa Clara, across the street
from my own former home. Neither one has had even
a coat of paint since I left. 


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Also check out this article by Gary Marx (no relation to Karl), a former colleague at The Chicago Tribune: http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/20051016/news_1h16cuba.html

















Comments

  1. When I visited the Salvation Army in Havana in 2001, the main building had not been painted since the revolution. Paint was not available in the stores. But it could be had on the informal economy. For dollars. After my visit, they painted their building. One day I may get to return to see other painted buildings.

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  3. That was a fun trip down memory lane. So many of the houses remind me of the Florida of my youth. Thanks for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  4. very interesting houses. your uncle's place is beautifully kept! funny that you mentioned that such houses can be found in miami and south florida because that's exactly what came to mind when i saw them. the one built by batista's wife must have been quite elegant in its day.

    i am really enjoying all your posts on cuba. i always feel like going back after i read them. as i'v said before, someday. for now we will keep traveling through asia.

    take care and have a great weekend.

    teresa in nagoya

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    Replies
    1. Can't blame you for wanting to stay in Asia; it's quite a ways from Cuba. Batista's house was pretty impressive even in its dilapidated state. I asked one of my relatives who lives nearby about the condition, and he said the place would have to be almost completely redone because it's been trashed. A shame.

      alfred

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  5. I signed up once before to reply but have never been able to make it work. Therefore I have "almost" replied many times to your blog. My husband helped me reapply. I hope you get it this time. I never miss reading one of your blogs and have loved them all.

    The reason I have been moved to try again is that this blog hit a home run.

    Betweem 1955-1959 I was s student at the Univ. of Minnesota majoring in Latin American Studies. About 1957 my Cuban professor Senor Cuneo had me interested in what was happening in Cuba. Later like most enthusiatic college students I fell in love with the brave young rebels in the hills, especially Fidel Castro. I even applied for a job with Cubana Airlines as a stewardess. They politely turned me down as I was not a Cuban National. Later after I graduated in 1959 I turned down a chance to make a day trip to Havana from Miami(I could not interest anyone in accompanying me). Twenty some years later I had a chance to visit again as a travel agent. Before our group left the Mariel Boat Lift began. My husband said "honey your are going the wrong way, but there will be lots of empty seats."

    I could write a book about those 4 days and what I saw and learned, but obviously I have already used up my space. The phrase that resounds in my head was "soon to be restored". What you have described means it never has been restored. I saw what you saw;old cars, hungry people, decaying buildings. Pictures of CHE, anti-American posters and my assurance that Fidel Castro had long since failed to be a HERO.

    Thank you for your most informative post and update on the non-progress that Communism has brought to Cuba. I'd love to visit you guys if I ever come back to SMA.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much. Glad you like my blog. I also had a brief love affair with the revolution when I was in college, during the late 60s. While the revolution has had some achievements, particularly in the area of education, as a vehicle for prosperity it hasn't worked. Fifty-four years of struggle and Cuba is not going anywhere.

      Check out the following pictures of Trinidad, a colonial city on the southern coast of Cuba:

      http://www.flickr.com/photos/alcuban/sets/72157630072490077/show/

      Delete
  6. Very beautiful houses.It is so cute and love it.
    Thanks to showing me.............
    moulding in santa clara

    ReplyDelete

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