Hotel Habana Riviera: Difference between revisions
Changed 2 dead refs and filled-in 3. |
→Construction: Not a "claim to fame." |
||
(25 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Hotel in Havana, Cuba}} |
|||
{{Infobox hotel |
{{Infobox hotel |
||
|hotel_name = Hotel |
|hotel_name = Hotel Habana Riviera by Iberostar |
||
|image = Hotel Riviera (525406392).jpg |
|image = Hotel Riviera (525406392).jpg |
||
|caption = Hotel Habana Riviera (2007) |
|caption = Hotel Habana Riviera (2007) |
||
Line 7: | Line 8: | ||
|closing_date = |
|closing_date = |
||
|coordinates = {{coord|23.1397|-82.4040|type:landmark_region:CU|display=title,inline}} |
|coordinates = {{coord|23.1397|-82.4040|type:landmark_region:CU|display=title,inline}} |
||
| |
|other_designers = Albert Parvin (interiors) |
||
|architect = [[Igor B. Polevitzky]] |
|architect = [[Igor B. Polevitzky]] |
||
|operator = [[Iberostar Hotels & Resorts]] |
|operator = [[Iberostar Hotels & Resorts]] |
||
Line 15: | Line 16: | ||
|website = https://www.iberostar.com/en/hotels/la-habana/habana-riviera-by-iberostar |
|website = https://www.iberostar.com/en/hotels/la-habana/habana-riviera-by-iberostar |
||
}} |
}} |
||
The '''Hotel |
The '''Hotel Habana Riviera by Iberostar''', originally known as the '''Havana Riviera''', is a historic resort hotel located on the [[Malecón, Havana|Malecón]] waterfront boulevard in the [[Vedado]] district of [[Havana]], [[Cuba]]. The hotel, which is managed by the Spanish [[Iberostar Hotels & Resorts|Iberostar]] chain, was built in 1957 and still maintains its original 1950s style. It has twenty-one floors containing 352 rooms all of which feature views of the water and the [[Vedado]] neighborhood. |
||
== |
==History== |
||
===Construction=== |
|||
[[File:Hotel Riviere 1973 Havanna PD 2.jpg|thumb|right|The pool from above c. 1973]] |
[[File:Hotel Riviere 1973 Havanna PD 2.jpg|thumb|right|The pool from above c. 1973]] |
||
[[File:Hotel Riviere 1973 Havanna PD 3.jpg|thumb|right|Cabanas and the three-level diving platform c. 1973]] |
[[File:Hotel Riviere 1973 Havanna PD 3.jpg|thumb|right|Cabanas and the three-level diving platform c. 1973]] |
||
The Havana |
The Havana Riviera was originally owned by [[gangster|mobster]] [[Meyer Lansky]] who had been inspired to build it after visiting his friend, [[Moe Dalitz]]'s nine-storey [[Riviera (hotel and casino)|Riviera Casino]] on the [[Las Vegas Strip]]. It was intended to rival the comfort and contemporary luxury of any Las Vegas hotel of the era. The choice to build in Havana was because Lansky simply did not want to be subject to U.S. laws or the scrutiny of the [[FBI]]. The hotel was officially operated by the "Riviera de Cuba S.A. company", established in 1956. The original incorporation papers also listed the names of certain "Miami hotel operators", a Canadian textile company and several others. It was built at a cost of [[United States dollar|US $]]8 million, most of which was provided by the Bank for Economic and Social Development (BANDES), a state-run development bank set up by then President, [[Fulgencio Batista]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://www.uncpress.org/book/9781469632100/the-cuban-connection/|title=The Cuban Connection|author=Eduardo Sáenz Rovner|translator=Russ Davidson|isbn=0-8078-3175-1|publisher=UNC Press|year=2009}}</ref> |
||
Lansky's investment partners included some of Las Vegas's biggest power brokers. Besides Dalitz were his old friends Morris Kleinman, Sam Tucker, [[Wilbur Clark]] of the [[Desert Inn]] (and Lansky's [[Hotel Nacional de Cuba|Hotel Nacional]] casino); [[Ed Levinson]] of the [[Fremont Hotel and Casino|Fremont Hotel]]; [[Charles Baron|Charles "Babe" Baron]] looking after [[Sam Giancana]]'s interests and [[Hyman Abrams]] and Morris Rosen of the [[Flamingo Las Vegas]] (of [[Bugsy Siegel]] fame). As with all of Lansky’s dealings, he and his underworld associates’ ownership of the Riviera was hidden behind layers of managers and front men. |
Lansky's investment partners included some of Las Vegas's biggest power brokers. Besides Dalitz were his old friends Morris Kleinman, Sam Tucker, [[Wilbur Clark]] of the [[Desert Inn]] (and Lansky's [[Hotel Nacional de Cuba|Hotel Nacional]] casino); [[Ed Levinson]] of the [[Fremont Hotel and Casino|Fremont Hotel]]; [[Charles Baron|Charles "Babe" Baron]] looking after [[Sam Giancana]]'s interests and [[Hyman Abrams]] and Morris Rosen of the [[Flamingo Las Vegas]] (of [[Bugsy Siegel]] fame). As with all of Lansky’s dealings, he and his underworld associates’ ownership of the Riviera was hidden behind layers of managers and front men. |
||
In selecting an architect for the Riviera, Lansky initially approached [[Wayne McAllister]], who was the prolific Los Angeles–based designer of Las Vegas's stylish [[Desert Inn]], Fremont, and [[Sands Hotel and Casino|Sands]] hotels—all properties controlled by Lansky’s associates in the "[[Cleveland crime family|Cleveland Gang]]". But Lansky's insistence that the hotel be completed in less than six months led McAllister to respectfully decline the offer. Instead, [[Igor B. Polevitzky|Igor Boris Polevitzky]], one of the deans of Miami Modern architecture, took the job with Irving Feldman, who had a dozen prestigious hotels and apartment blocks to his credit in Miami Beach, serving as the project's general contractor.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.themogh.org/mogh_article.php?a=52|title=Chip Venues & Their History|author=Steve Piccolo|publisher=The Museum of Gaming History|year=2000}}</ref> Original blueprints of the hotel were made in [[Miami]] by the Feldman Construction Corporation, as well as by the Cuban-based architect, Manuel Carrera Machado.<ref>[ |
In selecting an architect for the Riviera, Lansky initially approached [[Wayne McAllister]], who was the prolific Los Angeles–based designer of Las Vegas's stylish [[Desert Inn]], Fremont, and [[Sands Hotel and Casino|Sands]] hotels—all properties controlled by Lansky’s associates in the "[[Cleveland crime family|Cleveland Gang]]". But Lansky's insistence that the hotel be completed in less than six months led McAllister to respectfully decline the offer. Instead, [[Igor B. Polevitzky|Igor Boris Polevitzky]], one of the deans of Miami Modern architecture, took the job with Irving Feldman, who had a dozen prestigious hotels and apartment blocks to his credit in Miami Beach, serving as the project's general contractor.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.themogh.org/mogh_article.php?a=52|title=Chip Venues & Their History|author=Steve Piccolo|publisher=The Museum of Gaming History|year=2000|access-date=2014-02-09|archive-date=2014-02-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140222143054/http://www.themogh.org/mogh_article.php?a=52|url-status=dead}}</ref> Original blueprints of the hotel were made in [[Miami]] by the Feldman Construction Corporation, as well as by the Cuban-based architect, Manuel Carrera Machado.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20140222054308/http://www.habanarivierahotel.cu/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=48&Itemid=83&lang=en Original Concepts]</ref> |
||
Lansky then hired Albert B. Parvin of |
Lansky then hired Albert B. Parvin of Los Angeles to design the hotel's original decor. Parvin was an interior decorator who had laid carpets in many of the big hotels in Vegas. His main occupation was operating the Flamingo, a post he held between 1955 and 1960; nine years after Lansky himself agreed to [[Lucky Luciano]]'s demands that a [[Contract killing|hit]] be put out on the casino's would-be original operator, Bugsy Siegal at the infamous [[Havana Conference]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/bugsy-siegel-opens-flamingo-hotel|title=Bugsy Siegel opens Flamingo Hotel|publisher=History Chanel|access-date=December 20, 2018}}</ref> Lansky also hired two of Cuba’s great artists, muralist [[Rolando Lopez Dirube]] and sculptor Florencio Gelabert, who designed the white marble sculptures of an intertwined mermaid and swordfish that fronts the entrance porte cochere, and "Ritmo Cubano" (Cuban Rhythm), a large lobby sculpture that depicts twirling male and female dancers rendered in bronze. Between them, the three men deftly captured the marine outdoor atmosphere.<ref>{{cite book|title=Havana before Castro|author=Peter Moruzzi|url=http://www.havanabeforecastro.com/downloads/chpt-12-havana-riviera-pgs-182-192.pdf|isbn=1-4236-0367-2|publisher=Gibbs Smith|year=2008|access-date=2009-04-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090731011023/http://www.havanabeforecastro.com/downloads/chpt-12-havana-riviera-pgs-182-192.pdf|archive-date=2009-07-31|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
||
Work began on the site of a former sports arena in December 1956 in the midst of the revolutionary upheaval. Already envisioned as "The Riviera of the Caribbean", it was considered the epitome of resort-construction, and certainly was one of the more costly hotels in Cuba. It was also the first of its kind in Havana to have air-conditioned rooms. Each room had a view of the [[Gulf of Mexico]]. The hotel was not only near downtown Havana, but also close to residential [[Miramar, Havana|Miramar]] and Country Club.{{cn|date=April 2015}} |
Work began on the site of a former sports arena in December 1956 in the midst of the revolutionary upheaval. Already envisioned as "The Riviera of the Caribbean", it was considered the epitome of resort-construction, and certainly was one of the more costly hotels in Cuba. It was also the first of its kind in Havana to have air-conditioned rooms. Each room had a view of the [[Gulf of Mexico]]. The hotel was not only near downtown Havana, but also close to residential [[Miramar, Havana|Miramar]] and Country Club.{{cn|date=April 2015}} |
||
==Opening and famous guests== |
===Opening and famous guests=== |
||
When the Havana Riviera opened on December 10, 1957, it was the largest purpose-built casino-hotel in Cuba or anywhere in the world at that time outside Las Vegas (the [[Havana Hilton]] surpassed its size a |
When the Havana Riviera opened on December 10, 1957, it was the largest purpose-built casino-hotel in Cuba or anywhere in the world at that time outside Las Vegas (the [[Havana Hilton]] surpassed its size a few months later). The opening act that night at the Copa Cabaret was [[Ginger Rogers]] and her music revue directed by [[Jack Cole (choreographer)|Jack Cole]]. Lansky complained that Rogers could "wiggle her ass, but she can't sing a goddam note!" Within days the hotel became a symbol in Havana, attracting such acts as [[Abbott and Costello]] and [[Steve Allen]] who taped an episode of his prime time Sunday night show, [[The Steve Allen Show]] from the hotel featuring [[Mamie Van Doren]] swimming in the pool.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0864185/|title=From the Riviera Hotel, Havana Cuba|date=19 January 1958|publisher=[[IMDb]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/pleasureislandto00schw|author=Rosalie Schwartz|title=PLEASURE ISLAND: Tourism and Temptation in Cuba|chapter=12|publisher=University of Nebraska Press|year=1997|isbn=9780803292659|url-access=registration}}</ref> Other celebrated guests included [[William Holden]], diva [[Jean Fenn]], [[Nat King Cole]] and [[Ava Gardner]] who was rumored to have dragged a [[bellhop]] into her bed. |
||
After the hotel was finished, Lansky installed himself in the Presidential Suite on the top floor as his command post, appointing Harry Smith, a prominent hotelman from [[Toronto]] as president of the hotel and T. James Ennis, who was well known in Cuba hotel circles, as the managing director. Lansky's official title was "kitchen director," but he controlled every aspect of the hotel, especially the casino which was operated by [[Frank Erickson]], Giordino Cellini, Ed Levenson and Dusty Peters. He had initially appointed [[Dino Cellini]] from Ohio to run the casino but replaced him with Erickson who was serving as [[Frank Costello]]’s representative in Cuba.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.visitcuba.com/2013/07/cosa-nostra-business-ventures-the-mafia-in-cuba-part-3/|title=Cosa Nostra Business Ventures – The Mafia in Cuba Part 3|date=30 July 2013|author=Antonio Pillo Jr| |
After the hotel was finished, Lansky installed himself in the Presidential Suite on the top floor as his command post, appointing Harry Smith, a prominent hotelman from [[Toronto]] as president of the hotel and T. James Ennis, who was well known in Cuba hotel circles, as the managing director. Lansky's official title was "kitchen director," but he controlled every aspect of the hotel, especially the casino which was operated by [[Frank Erickson]], Giordino Cellini, Ed Levenson and Dusty Peters. He had initially appointed [[Dino Cellini]] from Ohio to run the casino but replaced him with Erickson who was serving as [[Frank Costello]]’s representative in Cuba.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.visitcuba.com/2013/07/cosa-nostra-business-ventures-the-mafia-in-cuba-part-3/|title=Cosa Nostra Business Ventures – The Mafia in Cuba Part 3|date=30 July 2013|author=Antonio Pillo Jr|access-date=20 December 2018}}</ref> Since Cubans had never been trained for gambling operations on such a large scale, [[pit boss]]es, dealers and stickmen were brought from the States as "technicians" and in that category were allowed to stay on two-year visas. These men, veterans of the working class of illicit U.S. gambling, eventually turned into tutors for the Cubans. The casino would make over $3 million in its first four months of operation. |
||
== |
===Revolution=== |
||
Unfortunately for Lansky, the |
Unfortunately for Lansky, the [[Cuban Revolution]] caused all of Americans' properties in Cuba to be seized. |
||
Lansky, whose health was declining by this point, chartered a plane that same New Year's Eve headed for the [[Bahamas]]. With him went his dream of being at the center of Cuba's gambling operations. |
|||
On January 22, 1959, [[Fidel Castro]] held a press conference at the Copa Cabaret inside the hotel where he gave his response to the world with regards to the |
On January 22, 1959, [[Fidel Castro]] held a press conference at the Copa Cabaret inside the hotel where he gave his response to the world with regards to the Cuban Revolution. In October of the following year he nationalized all the island's hotel-casinos and outlawed gambling. |
||
==Today== |
===Today=== |
||
The hotel still maintains the famous "Palacio de la Salsa Club" where [[salsa music|salsa]] bands regularly perform. |
The hotel still maintains the famous "Palacio de la Salsa Club" where [[salsa music|salsa]] bands regularly perform. |
||
The ''[[Tampa Tribune]]'' reported in December 2015, that Lansky's heirs, who still live in the [[Tampa, Florida]], area, are seeking restitution for the Cuban government's confiscation of the hotel. They did not file a claim for damages with the [[Foreign Claims Settlement Commission]], however.<ref>{{cite news|author=Guzzo, Paul|title=Lansky kin have score to settle with Cuba|work=[[Tampa Tribune]]|date=December 9, 2015|page=1}}</ref> |
The ''[[Tampa Tribune]]'' reported in December 2015, that Lansky's heirs, who still live in the [[Tampa, Florida]], area, are seeking restitution for the Cuban government's confiscation of the hotel. They did not file a claim for damages with the [[Foreign Claims Settlement Commission]], however.<ref>{{cite news|author=Guzzo, Paul|title=Lansky kin have score to settle with Cuba|work=[[Tampa Tribune]]|date=December 9, 2015|page=1}}</ref> |
||
The hotel was operated for many years by the Gran Caribe chain, a Cuban state-owned company. On December 10, 2016,<ref>{{cite |
The hotel was operated for many years by the Gran Caribe chain, a Cuban state-owned company. On December 10, 2016,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.diariolasamericas.com/america-latina/iberostar-asumira-la-administracion-del-hotel-riviera-la-habana-n4109846|title=Iberostar asumirá la administración del Hotel Riviera de La Habana|work=[[Diario Las Américas]]|date=10 December 2016|access-date=20 December 2018}}</ref> it was announced that [[Iberostar Hotels & Resorts]], a Spanish chain, would assume management of the hotel in 2017.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.iberostar.com/en/press_room/news/iberostar-to-take-over-management-of-havanas-landmark-hotel-riviera-25f805a4-5702-4d71-bca8-9ac40e141c23|title=Iberostar to Take Over Management of Havana’s Landmark Hotel Riviera|publisher=Iberostar|access-date=20 December 2018}}</ref> The hotel was renamed the Hotel Habana Riviera by Iberostar. In 2018, Iberostar announced plans to invest €35 million in renovations.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hotelmanagement.net/development/cuban-tourism-ministry-focuses-driving-havana-hotel-investments|author=Victoria Rosenthal|title=Cuba seeks to drive Havana hotel investments|publisher=Hotel Management|date=18 July 2018|access-date=20 December 2018}}</ref> |
||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
||
*{{cite web|url=http://www.habanarivierahotel.cu/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=19&Itemid=72&lang=en|title=History of Hotel Habana Riviera|publisher=HabanaRivieraHotel.cu}} |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{commons category|Hotel Riviera (Havana)}} |
{{commons category|Hotel Riviera (Havana)}} |
||
*[https://www.iberostar.com/en/hotels/la-habana/habana-riviera-by-iberostar Hotel |
*[https://www.iberostar.com/en/hotels/la-habana/habana-riviera-by-iberostar Hotel Habana Riviera by Iberostar – Official Site] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191213183940/https://www.iberostar.com/en/hotels/la-habana/habana-riviera-by-iberostar/ |date=2019-12-13 }} |
||
*[http://www.ccgtcc-ccn.com/Cuba.pdf Gaming in Cuba by Steve Piccolo. ccgtcc-ccn.com] |
*[http://www.ccgtcc-ccn.com/Cuba.pdf Gaming in Cuba by Steve Piccolo. ccgtcc-ccn.com] |
||
Line 64: | Line 65: | ||
[[Category:Hotels established in 1957]] |
[[Category:Hotels established in 1957]] |
||
[[Category:Hotel buildings completed in 1957]] |
[[Category:Hotel buildings completed in 1957]] |
||
[[Category:Nightclubs in Havana]] |
|||
[[Category:20th-century architecture in Cuba]] |
Latest revision as of 19:24, 22 October 2024
Hotel Habana Riviera by Iberostar | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Paseo y Malecón Havana, Cuba |
Coordinates | 23°08′23″N 82°24′14″W / 23.1397°N 82.4040°W |
Opening | December 10, 1957 |
Owner | Gran Caribe Grupo Hotelero |
Management | Iberostar Hotels & Resorts |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 21 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Igor B. Polevitzky |
Other designers | Albert Parvin (interiors) |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 352 |
Website | |
https://www.iberostar.com/en/hotels/la-habana/habana-riviera-by-iberostar |
The Hotel Habana Riviera by Iberostar, originally known as the Havana Riviera, is a historic resort hotel located on the Malecón waterfront boulevard in the Vedado district of Havana, Cuba. The hotel, which is managed by the Spanish Iberostar chain, was built in 1957 and still maintains its original 1950s style. It has twenty-one floors containing 352 rooms all of which feature views of the water and the Vedado neighborhood.
History
[edit]Construction
[edit]The Havana Riviera was originally owned by mobster Meyer Lansky who had been inspired to build it after visiting his friend, Moe Dalitz's nine-storey Riviera Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. It was intended to rival the comfort and contemporary luxury of any Las Vegas hotel of the era. The choice to build in Havana was because Lansky simply did not want to be subject to U.S. laws or the scrutiny of the FBI. The hotel was officially operated by the "Riviera de Cuba S.A. company", established in 1956. The original incorporation papers also listed the names of certain "Miami hotel operators", a Canadian textile company and several others. It was built at a cost of US $8 million, most of which was provided by the Bank for Economic and Social Development (BANDES), a state-run development bank set up by then President, Fulgencio Batista.[1]
Lansky's investment partners included some of Las Vegas's biggest power brokers. Besides Dalitz were his old friends Morris Kleinman, Sam Tucker, Wilbur Clark of the Desert Inn (and Lansky's Hotel Nacional casino); Ed Levinson of the Fremont Hotel; Charles "Babe" Baron looking after Sam Giancana's interests and Hyman Abrams and Morris Rosen of the Flamingo Las Vegas (of Bugsy Siegel fame). As with all of Lansky’s dealings, he and his underworld associates’ ownership of the Riviera was hidden behind layers of managers and front men.
In selecting an architect for the Riviera, Lansky initially approached Wayne McAllister, who was the prolific Los Angeles–based designer of Las Vegas's stylish Desert Inn, Fremont, and Sands hotels—all properties controlled by Lansky’s associates in the "Cleveland Gang". But Lansky's insistence that the hotel be completed in less than six months led McAllister to respectfully decline the offer. Instead, Igor Boris Polevitzky, one of the deans of Miami Modern architecture, took the job with Irving Feldman, who had a dozen prestigious hotels and apartment blocks to his credit in Miami Beach, serving as the project's general contractor.[2] Original blueprints of the hotel were made in Miami by the Feldman Construction Corporation, as well as by the Cuban-based architect, Manuel Carrera Machado.[3]
Lansky then hired Albert B. Parvin of Los Angeles to design the hotel's original decor. Parvin was an interior decorator who had laid carpets in many of the big hotels in Vegas. His main occupation was operating the Flamingo, a post he held between 1955 and 1960; nine years after Lansky himself agreed to Lucky Luciano's demands that a hit be put out on the casino's would-be original operator, Bugsy Siegal at the infamous Havana Conference.[4] Lansky also hired two of Cuba’s great artists, muralist Rolando Lopez Dirube and sculptor Florencio Gelabert, who designed the white marble sculptures of an intertwined mermaid and swordfish that fronts the entrance porte cochere, and "Ritmo Cubano" (Cuban Rhythm), a large lobby sculpture that depicts twirling male and female dancers rendered in bronze. Between them, the three men deftly captured the marine outdoor atmosphere.[5]
Work began on the site of a former sports arena in December 1956 in the midst of the revolutionary upheaval. Already envisioned as "The Riviera of the Caribbean", it was considered the epitome of resort-construction, and certainly was one of the more costly hotels in Cuba. It was also the first of its kind in Havana to have air-conditioned rooms. Each room had a view of the Gulf of Mexico. The hotel was not only near downtown Havana, but also close to residential Miramar and Country Club.[citation needed]
Opening and famous guests
[edit]When the Havana Riviera opened on December 10, 1957, it was the largest purpose-built casino-hotel in Cuba or anywhere in the world at that time outside Las Vegas (the Havana Hilton surpassed its size a few months later). The opening act that night at the Copa Cabaret was Ginger Rogers and her music revue directed by Jack Cole. Lansky complained that Rogers could "wiggle her ass, but she can't sing a goddam note!" Within days the hotel became a symbol in Havana, attracting such acts as Abbott and Costello and Steve Allen who taped an episode of his prime time Sunday night show, The Steve Allen Show from the hotel featuring Mamie Van Doren swimming in the pool.[6][7] Other celebrated guests included William Holden, diva Jean Fenn, Nat King Cole and Ava Gardner who was rumored to have dragged a bellhop into her bed.
After the hotel was finished, Lansky installed himself in the Presidential Suite on the top floor as his command post, appointing Harry Smith, a prominent hotelman from Toronto as president of the hotel and T. James Ennis, who was well known in Cuba hotel circles, as the managing director. Lansky's official title was "kitchen director," but he controlled every aspect of the hotel, especially the casino which was operated by Frank Erickson, Giordino Cellini, Ed Levenson and Dusty Peters. He had initially appointed Dino Cellini from Ohio to run the casino but replaced him with Erickson who was serving as Frank Costello’s representative in Cuba.[8] Since Cubans had never been trained for gambling operations on such a large scale, pit bosses, dealers and stickmen were brought from the States as "technicians" and in that category were allowed to stay on two-year visas. These men, veterans of the working class of illicit U.S. gambling, eventually turned into tutors for the Cubans. The casino would make over $3 million in its first four months of operation.
Revolution
[edit]Unfortunately for Lansky, the Cuban Revolution caused all of Americans' properties in Cuba to be seized.
Lansky, whose health was declining by this point, chartered a plane that same New Year's Eve headed for the Bahamas. With him went his dream of being at the center of Cuba's gambling operations.
On January 22, 1959, Fidel Castro held a press conference at the Copa Cabaret inside the hotel where he gave his response to the world with regards to the Cuban Revolution. In October of the following year he nationalized all the island's hotel-casinos and outlawed gambling.
Today
[edit]The hotel still maintains the famous "Palacio de la Salsa Club" where salsa bands regularly perform.
The Tampa Tribune reported in December 2015, that Lansky's heirs, who still live in the Tampa, Florida, area, are seeking restitution for the Cuban government's confiscation of the hotel. They did not file a claim for damages with the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission, however.[9]
The hotel was operated for many years by the Gran Caribe chain, a Cuban state-owned company. On December 10, 2016,[10] it was announced that Iberostar Hotels & Resorts, a Spanish chain, would assume management of the hotel in 2017.[11] The hotel was renamed the Hotel Habana Riviera by Iberostar. In 2018, Iberostar announced plans to invest €35 million in renovations.[12]
References
[edit]- ^ Eduardo Sáenz Rovner (2009). The Cuban Connection. Translated by Russ Davidson. UNC Press. ISBN 0-8078-3175-1.
- ^ Steve Piccolo (2000). "Chip Venues & Their History". The Museum of Gaming History. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
- ^ Original Concepts
- ^ "Bugsy Siegel opens Flamingo Hotel". History Chanel. Retrieved December 20, 2018.
- ^ Peter Moruzzi (2008). Havana before Castro (PDF). Gibbs Smith. ISBN 1-4236-0367-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-07-31. Retrieved 2009-04-10.
- ^ "From the Riviera Hotel, Havana Cuba". IMDb. 19 January 1958.
- ^ Rosalie Schwartz (1997). "12". PLEASURE ISLAND: Tourism and Temptation in Cuba. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803292659.
- ^ Antonio Pillo Jr (30 July 2013). "Cosa Nostra Business Ventures – The Mafia in Cuba Part 3". Retrieved 20 December 2018.
- ^ Guzzo, Paul (December 9, 2015). "Lansky kin have score to settle with Cuba". Tampa Tribune. p. 1.
- ^ "Iberostar asumirá la administración del Hotel Riviera de La Habana". Diario Las Américas. 10 December 2016. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
- ^ "Iberostar to Take Over Management of Havana's Landmark Hotel Riviera". Iberostar. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
- ^ Victoria Rosenthal (18 July 2018). "Cuba seeks to drive Havana hotel investments". Hotel Management. Retrieved 20 December 2018.