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Club Náutico

Coordinates: 23°5′37″N 82°27′35″W / 23.09361°N 82.45972°W / 23.09361; -82.45972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Club Náutico de Marianao
Arches at Club Náutico, 1953
Map
Former namesClub de las Panteras
General information
TypeRecreation
Architectural styleModern
LocationPlaya, Havana
Addressterminus of 152 (off 5ta Avenida)
Town or city Ciudad de La Habana
CountryCuba Cuba
Coordinates23°5′37″N 82°27′35″W / 23.09361°N 82.45972°W / 23.09361; -82.45972
Inaugurated1953
OwnerCarlos A. Fernández Campos
Dimensions
Diameter20'
Technical details
Structural systemArches
MaterialReinforced concrete
Floor count1
Design and construction
Architect(s)Max Borges Recio

Club Náutico (‘Nautical Club’) is a private club in Cuba used by members of government unions since being seized by the government in the 1960s. It is in the reparto (city ward) of Náutico, Playa, Havana.

History

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Club Náutico was built in the 1920s and expanded in 1936 by its owner Carlos Fernández. Guests paid a modest fee (.10 cents), eventually there were more than five thousand subscribers.[1] Fernández had in addition to the enjoyment of a short beach, a dance floor with an orchestra.[2] By the 1950s, an increase in membership necessitated expansion of the original premises and in 1953 Max Borges Recio designed a set of porticos covered by vaults similar to the ones he recently had designed for the Tropicana.[2]

Ownership of Club Náutico was seized by the government in the 1960s, and the club was converted into the Félix Elmuza Workers' Social Circle. As a Workers' Social Circle, it was used as a private club for members of government unions and has fallen into disrepair through decades of neglect. In 2018, the Ministry of Tourism announced a plan to convert the sites into tourist destinations.[3]

Architecture

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Borges used a catenary arch, similar to those used in the Tropicana.[2]

There is a color differentiation at the Club Náutico between the blue, and smooth surface of the architectural covering of the arch and the white structure above. The arches at the Club Náutico lack the architectural and structural purity that Borges achieved at the Tropicana as most of the arches there are for the most part self-supporting. Here as in the Tropicana Borges used the difference in height between arches to insert a clear glass skylight. The floors are polished concrete.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Evolución histórica del Reparto y Club Náutico (Report). March 2019.
  2. ^ a b c "¿Quién salvará las playas del oeste de La Habana?". Retrieved 2018-10-10.
  3. ^ "Clubes privados cubanos convertidos en Círculos Sociales Obreros pronto serán para extranjeros". infobae (in European Spanish). 2018-07-19. Retrieved 2025-06-25.
  4. ^ Gómez Díaz, Francisco (2008). De Forestier a Sert : ciudad y arquitectura en La Habana (1925-1960). Madrid : Abada Editores : Territorio y ciudad. pp. 440–441.
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