Obispo Street (Havana) Explained
The Obispo Street (Spanish; Castilian: Calle Obispo) is one of the most famous and traveled streets of Old Havana.[1] During its history, the street has received several names such as: San Juan, Bishop (Obispo), Weyler, Pi Margall, among others, for a total of 47. It is the longest Street in Old Havana. Street shops have always been abundant alongside O'Reilly Street, which is parallel to it from its inception from Zulueta to Havana Bay.
Places of interest
- Palace of the Captains-General
- Plaza de Armas
- National Museum of Natural History of Cuba
- Obispo 463, Sastrería[2]
- Bar "El Floridita"
- Numismatic Museum
- Bookstore "Fayad Jamís"[3]
- House of "Mayorazgo Recio"
- Bookstore La Moderna Poesía
- Ministry of Finance and Price
- Library "Rubén Martínez Villena"
- The house of water "La Tinaja"
- San Jerónimo University
- Cuban Book Institute
Notes and References
- Web site: Calle Obispo - Havana City Guide. 11 December 2013. 16 May 2017. 30 March 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190330120900/http://www.lahabana.com/guide/calle-obispo/. dead.
- Web site: Edificio de la calle Obispo No. 463, entre Villegas y Aguacate . habanaradio.cu . 2014-03-21 . 2017-05-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20170206075126/http://www.habanaradio.cu/articulos/edificio-de-la-calle-obispo-no-463-entre-villegas-y-aguacate/ . 2017-02-06 . es.
- Web site: Nuevo espacio para el elogio en la librería Fayad Jamís - Cubaperiodistas. 3 November 2016. 16 May 2017.