CUBA: An Architectural Analysis
CUBA: An Architectural Analysis
metals
wood
vegetation
facades
2 4
6 8
7 9 11
2 3
1 5
10
1 3 5
6 8 10
7 9 11
12 14 16
12 13
13 15 17
18 20 22
17
14 15 16
19 18
20
21
23
22
19 21 23
Patchwork
As a result of Cuban residential law,
moving out of one home and into
another is quite the trouble. The
expand-when-you-can building cul-
ture in Cuba has transformed the ur-
ban fabric into a patchwork of colors
and materials that now express both
identity and ownership.
The colorful tendency doesn’t seem
to have any scientific explanation,
but locals explain it as a reflection of
their colorful and happy culture.
Infills
The concept of expand-where-you-
can really challenges the rigidness
and symmetry of the original archi-
tectural buildings in Havana.
Buildings once surrounded by vo-
lumous and airy verandas now have
been transformed into closed volu-
mes by the residents’ need for maxi-
mized indoor space, and so in spite
of the desire for private outdoor
access, this falls short to the need of
space for the growing family.
Calle 19 between B and C
It is quite peculiar seing some of the
clean kept, colorful facades, when as
soon as you change your perspective
a little, you see the side of the buil-
ding: raw, grey, and shaded.
Cubans often spend hours on their
veranda watching the public, and
the building becomes part of their
identity. The facade is the pride of
the building and its residents.
”I live in the rose building with blue
details on calle 17 between A and B”
Backside
The backside is where they hide
their insecurities and their ugly ne-
cessities
It is plastered with air condition
boxes, electrical wires, dusins of
antennas, and of course the blue
plastic water tanks. Due to the unre-
liable infrastructure, every home has
its own water tank and antenna, and
every room its cooling unit, in order
to make sure they have resources,
should the system fail to deliver.
colors &
textures
An abstraction of the colorscape
composed by the streets of Havana
4 keys of Cuban
architecture
Windows and openings
Openings are very important in a
hot climate. The windows are mo-
stly not closed off with glass, but in-
stead they use large blinds to let air
in, while controlling the amount of
sunlight allowed to enter the room.
Many doors have a second layer,
which consists of a patterned iron
fence. It keeps intruders out while
still allowing a flow of air.
This ensures natural cross ventilati-
on and helps cool the indoor spaces.
High ceilings
In the untransformed Spanish colo-
nial buldings the rooms are almost
double height. The high ceiling
traps the hot air and allows for a flow
of cool air in the lower part of the
room.
In most of these buildings, howe-
ver, the effect of the high ceiling
has been compromised with the in-
troduction of the barbacoa – a light
structure that exploits the vertical
space and doubles the floor area.
• train station
agriculture production •
• hotel ruin
water cooling towers•
•
baseball field sugar mill• • tile production
1:10.000
HERSHEY
Population: 4.800
mapping
6
barracones
illegal settlements
in the ruins of the
old single worker’s
housing building
7 8
primary school playground
Planned walk a teenage
hang-out
The walk was limited to two of the
NW-SE facing colomns of the grid.
The rule was to go where people
gathered. 9
church
The areas of activity in Hershey are inaccessible when
all related to a building with a public there is no service
function. They are not just random
meeting spots as seen in Havana.
Furthermore, there was a big con- 10 11
trast to the ’dead’ areas which rela- secondary disco
ted to the ruins or partly abandoned school once a
closed for reno- cinema
building structures. vation – no one
knows how long
12
shops
5
water cooling towers
4
library
once a morgue
6
5
7 4 3
8 daily market
9 10 3 only a couple
2 hours
11 12
2
park
center of life
1 under the
giant tree
1
power plant
interview
” Bianca, age 38
I know my neighbor. We have a very good relationship. Here neighbors don’t
eat together. Only family and very good friends eat together.
Our family is very close always. Have a problem, everybody comes running.
The money, the clothes, the shoes – forget that! We just need to be together.
We are happy; there is no danger. We feel safe. We go to the beach, we go to
the park. We are not afraid to go on the street.
I wish activities for children. Children and old people they need a party, they
need a base. They need people to talk to for people to know they’re alive. I’d
like for the young people to not forget about the old. I say the child is the fu-
ture, but the old people are their parents and we need them.
Hershey’s history is very beautiful. People don’t want their history to be lost.
”
object
Ceramic tile
This object was found in a pile of
building rubble. It is a piece of bro-
ken ceramic tile, which can be pro-
duced locally in Hershey.
It symbolizes local resources and
productivity: Locally dug soil and
local workforce.
Broken tiles like this one are some-
times seen reused in mosaic artwork
in the streets of Havana where they
are both decorative and tell a story
of sustainability and creative cultue.
1:10.000
H AVA N A
Population: 2.130.000
transformations
creation of
new routes and
connections
Inwards
The city is densifying more and more
people move into the extisting buil-
ding structures, so the interiors are
modified in order to accommodate
10-20 families living in a building
that used to house one family.
Interior streets emerge, and they
dig deep into the buildings, some
reaching neighboring buildings and ”These alleys are a kind of
twilight xone where although you
creating alternate, organic routes of
are free to enter, no one really
travel independent of the rigid grid; does unless they have business
some with dead ends like a labrinth. there.” – Editing Havana
modified structure
original structure