Hotel Capri Explained

Hotel Name:Hotel NH Capri La Habana
Location:Calle 21 / Calle N, Vedado, Havana
Coordinates:23.1422°N -82.3826°W
Opening Date:1957 (original), 2014 (reopened)
Architect:Jose Canaves
Owner:Revolutionary government
Number Of Rooms:220
Floors:19

The Hotel NH Capri La Habana is a historic high rise hotel located in central Havana, Cuba.

History

In 1955, President Batista enacted Hotel Law 2074, offering tax incentives, government loans, and casino licenses to anyone wishing to build hotels in excess of $1,000,000 or nightclubs for $200,000 in Havana. This law brought Meyer Lansky and his "associates" in the mafia flooding to the city to take advantage.

The Hotel Capri de Havana was one of the first mob hotels to be built. Located on Calle 21, 1 Mp. 8 Vedado, only two blocks from the Hotel Nacional, it opened in November 1957. With its 250 rooms, the nineteen-story structure was one of the largest hotel/casinos in Havana during its heyday. It boasted a swimming pool on the roof.

Owned by mobster Santo Trafficante, Jr. of Tampa, Florida, the hotel/casino was operated by Nicholas Di Costanzo, racketeer Charles Turin (aliases: Charles Tourine, Charley "The Blade"), and Santino Masselli of the Bronx NY(aliases:"Sonny the Butcher"). After it opened, George Raft was hired to be the public front for the hotel's club during his gangster days in Cuba.[1] It was believed that he owned a considerable interest in the club.[2]

The hotel was designed by architect Jose Canaves and owned by the Canaves family. The hotel, along with its famous casino, was leased to American hotelier, "Skip" Shephard. The Hotel Capri was nationalized by the Cuban government in October 1960, and the casino was closed.[3]

The hotel was known as the Hotel Horizontes Capri in the 1990s, before it closed in 2003. It reopened[4] in January 2014,[5] following major renovations[4] managed by the Spanish NH Hotel Group as the Hotel NH Capri La Habana.[6]

In 2017 the hotel was one of several sites of a suspected acoustic attack against American diplomats, described as "Havana syndrome".[7] Reports of piercing, high-pitched noises and inexplicable ailments were investigated, but a source of the phenomenon was never definitively determined.[8]

Filmography

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=OlSTNxZUAdwC&q=Havana+Before+Castro+by+Peter+Moruzzi Havana Before Castro by Peter Moruzzi, p.176
  2. http://cuban-exile.com/doc_126-150/doc0126.html Cuban Information Archives, Document 0126
  3. https://www.justice.gov/fcsc/cuba/documents/1-1500/0390.pdf Foreign Claims Settlement Commission of the United States - In the Matter of the Claim of Horwath and Horwath September 20, 1967
  4. Web site: Capri Hotel on Cubaism.com . 2014-02-01 . 2019-05-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190529193209/http://www.cubaism.com/en/hotels/view/hotel-capri/532 . dead .
  5. http://www.desertsun.com/story/travel/2014/03/02/classic-cuba-famed-art-deco-hotel-reopens-after-renovation/5942145/ Classic Cuba: Famed art-deco hotel reopens after renovation Desert Sun March 1, 2014
  6. http://www.nh-hotels.com/nh/en/hotels/cuba/la-habana/nh-capri-la-habana.html NH Hotel Group - Hotel NH Capri La Habana nh-hotels.com
  7. Hitt . Jack . The Real Story Behind the Havana Embassy Mystery . Vanity Fair . en-us.
  8. News: Microwave Weapons Are Prime Suspect in Ills of U.S. Embassy Workers. 1 September 2018. William J.. Broad. New York Times. 2 September 2018. en.