Il tuo soggiorno — Casa de Pablo
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La proprietà — Casa de Pablo
Casa de Pablo is a colonial-era guesthouse with high ceilings, mosaic tile floors and a quiet courtyard. It feels lived-in rather than polished — the lobby doubles as a family sitting room, and the staff treat you like a cousin visiting. It suits budget-conscious travellers who want authentic Havana character over hotel-chain amenities.
Cronache di Havana
Havana was founded by the Spanish in 1519 on a natural harbour that became a key stop for treasure fleets. Its colonial core, Habana Vieja, is a UNESCO World Heritage site filled with baroque and neoclassical buildings that have survived neglect and restoration. The 1959 revolution froze much of the city in time; today, classic American cars blend with modern convertibles, and the Malecón seawall is the city's living room. Contemporary Havana is a mix of crumbling grandeur, emerging private restaurants (paladares) and a resilient musical culture that thumps from every doorway.
Il momento migliore per visitare
Guida completa di Havana →I migliori mesi
November to April: dry season with temperatures 20-28°C, lower humidity and clear skies. It's the sweet spot for walking tours without sweat-drenched shirts.
Peak / Festival Surge
December to March is peak season, driven by winter sun-seekers from Canada and Europe. Hotel prices can rise 30-50% over those months. The Havana Jazz Festival in January adds extra demand.
Stagione di spalla
May and October are budget-friendly shoulders: still warm (25-30°C), fewer crowds, and rates often drop 20% as the wet season starts or ends. Expect afternoon showers that clear quickly.
Meteo e imballaggio
Havana is humid year-round, but July brings scorching midday heat (32°C+) and brief tropical downpours. Pack a light rain jacket or travel umbrella, and always carry a water bottle — dehydration hits fast in this humidity.
Briefing della città — Havana
- Havana's José Martí International Airport remains under renovation; expect longer wait times for immigration and baggage collection.
- New private room rentals (casas particulares) have proliferated in Centro Habana, but some lack reliable hot water — verify with your host before booking.
- The Malecón is being partially repaved near Vedado, causing occasional lane closures for drivers; walking is still fine.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Casa de Pablo, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the third or fourth floor facing the inner courtyard. These floors are high enough to avoid street-level commotion, and the courtyard orientation cuts noise from 58A itself.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid any room on the first floor facing the street (58A). That street is a lived-in residential road in Havana, so you'll get foot traffic, motorbikes, and neighbour noise without buffer. Also avoid rooms directly above the main entrance as the door slams echo up the stairwell.
Best views
Upper floors toward the back of the building overlook the compact courtyards typical of Centro Habana – laundry lines, potted plants, neighbours’ lives. It's not a vista, but it's the real Havana. Street-facing rooms give you a direct view of 58A‘s pavement and passing taxi colectivos.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4 are your best bet for quiet – further from the ground floor bustle and no rooftop machinery rumble.
🔊 Noise notes
58A is a narrow residential street in Centro Habana – expect early-morning street sweeping, revving 1950s cars, and occasional salsa from a neighbour's radio. Second-floor rooms may pick up sounds from the ground-floor common area or breakfast setup.
Insider tips
Request a top-floor room (third or fourth) when booking – they're usually quieter and have better airflow. If the booking site doesn't let you specify, arrive before 2pm and ask the host directly: they often manage floor assignments face-to-face.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
strutture alberghiere — Casa de Pablo
Free Wi-Fi in lobby and all guest rooms; speeds up to 10 Mbps download, 2 Mbps upload; requires a password from reception per device (max 3 devices per room)
Small passenger lift serves all 4 floors; no stairs-only sections
No complimentary newsstand; a single physical copy of Granma (Spanish) is placed in the lobby each weekday
Standard check-in from 15:00; early bag drop available from 10:00 at no charge; late check-out until 18:00 costs 30 CUC, subject to availability
Free for same-day arrivals and departures, stored behind reception
Step-free access at main entrance via portable ramp (available on request); lift to all floors; no accessible rooms or adapted bathrooms
No on-site parking; nearest secure public car park is Estacionamiento 283 at Calle 283 No. 154, 0.3 km walk, 5 CUC per night (open 24h). No EV charging
Tasse, imposte e depositi
City / tourist tax: None (Cuba does not charge a separate city tax to guests; all taxes included in room rate)
Deposit & card hold: A 50% advance deposit of total stay is required at booking; at check-in a credit card hold of 50 CUC (approx 50 USD equivalent) for incidentals is placed
Faith & Dietary vicino
- Place of worship: Iglesia Liga Evangélica de Cuba (392 m · ~5 min walk)
Stile di vita e ricreazione locale
Duty Free Shops Terminal 3 AIJM — 1.4 km · ~17 min walk
Parque Infantil Rita Montaner — 1.9 km · ~24 min walk
5 minuti di radio essenziali
Nearest — 1.2 km · ~15 min walk
Farmacia Comunitaria Normal — 568 m · ~7 min walk
Tienda — 154 m · ~2 min walk
Rancho Boyeros (General Peraza) — 2.9 km · ~36 min walk
Moneta e moneta
Get a travel card →Cuban Peso, CUP
Exchange at official CADECA booths for the tourist rate; avoid the airport and unofficial street changers who give poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard accepted in state-run hotels and some larger shops, but cash (CUP) is essential for most small businesses and transport.
Tip 10% in restaurants if no service charge, 25–50 CUP for taxi rides, and 50–100 CUP for hotel staff per service.
Mangiare, fare shopping e viaggiare su un budget
Cheap car hire →A small espresso from a street stand or bodega costs around 10–15 CUP.
A 'menu del día' (set lunch) in a local paladar or state canteen costs about 150–250 CUP.
A main dish (e.g. ropa vieja with rice) in an affordable paladar runs 200–350 CUP.
Cheap eats cluster around the 23rd Street and Malecón area, with pizza cups, churros, and croquetas from kiosks.
State-run 'bodegas' and basic 'mini-mercados' stock essentials; for bigger shops, head to the 'Mercado Agropecuario' near El Vedado.
Local markets like the 'Mercado de San Rafael' sell cheap T‑shirts and jeans; avoid touristy craft stalls.
The cheapest way is a collective taxi ('colectivo') on fixed routes for 20–40 CUP per ride; from the airport, take the public bus P-12 to Vedado (5 CUP) then connect.
Buy coffee and snacks from street vendors rather than hotels; walk or use colectivos instead of private taxis; eat lunch rather than dinner at restaurants (lunch sets are cheaper).
Emergency Contacts
HavanaCall 106 for police, 104 for ambulance, 105 for fire. For tourist assistance, dial 103 (Cuban tourist police). Mobile networks work; local SIMs (ETECSA) are reliable. Save these offline.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Havana, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Casa de Pablo
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 1.2 km · ~15 min walk — pharmacy · Farmacia Comunitaria Normal — 568 m · ~7 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Girare intorno
Central Park bus stop → Alamar (via 5ta Avenida)
💡 Hop on the Malecón route—bus P5 or P7 pass through Old Havana. Payment is by coin or phone card only; exact change essential. Expect the bus to be packed and hot during peak hours.
Terminal 3, José Martí International Airport → Old Havana (Central Park stop)
💡 Cheapest official airport transfer, but only runs from Terminal 3. If you arrive at Terminals 1 or 2, walk 15 minutes or take a 2 CUC taxi to Terminal 3 first. Space is first-come, first-served.
Old Havana taxi rank (e.g., Parque Central) → Vedado or Miramar
💡 Hail private yellow-tagged cars—not official taxis—for the true local fare of 10–20 CUP per person. Tell the driver 'Vedado' or your intersection. These run fixed routes but will drop you close to your destination for a small extra fee.
José Martí International Airport (HAV) → Casa Allegro, Old Havana
💡 Pre-book through your casa host for a reliable 25 CUC fixed rate. Avoid touts in the arrivals hall; look for drivers with yellow licence plates and a taxi cooperative badge.
Domande frequenti
What are the best rooms at Casa de Pablo?
Request a room on the third or fourth floor facing the inner courtyard. These floors are high enough to avoid street-level commotion, and the courtyard orientation cuts noise from 58A itself.
Which rooms should I avoid at Casa de Pablo?
Avoid any room on the first floor facing the street (58A). That street is a lived-in residential road in Havana, so you'll get foot traffic, motorbikes, and neighbour noise without buffer. Also avoid rooms directly above the main entrance as the door slams echo up the stairwell.
Is Casa de Pablo noisy?
58A is a narrow residential street in Centro Habana – expect early-morning street sweeping, revving 1950s cars, and occasional salsa from a neighbour's radio. Second-floor rooms may pick up sounds from the ground-floor common area or breakfast setup.
Which rooms have the best views at Casa de Pablo?
Upper floors toward the back of the building overlook the compact courtyards typical of Centro Habana – laundry lines, potted plants, neighbours’ lives. It's not a vista, but it's the real Havana. Street-facing rooms give you a direct view of 58A‘s pavement and passing taxi colectivos.
What are insider tips for staying at Casa de Pablo?
Request a top-floor room (third or fourth) when booking – they're usually quieter and have better airflow. If the booking site doesn't let you specify, arrive before 2pm and ask the host directly: they often manage floor assignments face-to-face.
What time is check-in at Casa de Pablo?
Check-in at Casa de Pablo is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Casa de Pablo have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi in lobby and all guest rooms; speeds up to 10 Mbps download, 2 Mbps upload; requires a password from reception per device (max 3 devices per room)
Is there a city or tourist tax at Casa de Pablo?
None (Cuba does not charge a separate city tax to guests; all taxes included in room rate)
Where can I eat cheaply near Casa de Pablo?
A 'menu del día' (set lunch) in a local paladar or state canteen costs about 150–250 CUP.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Casa de Pablo?
The cheapest way is a collective taxi ('colectivo') on fixed routes for 20–40 CUP per ride; from the airport, take the public bus P-12 to Vedado (5 CUP) then connect.
When is the best time to visit Havana?
November to April: dry season with temperatures 20-28°C, lower humidity and clear skies. It's the sweet spot for walking tours without sweat-drenched shirts.
Principali attrazioni a Havana
💡 Go early (8-9am) before tour groups arrive. The adjacent Museo de Arte Colonial costs a couple of CUP but gives rooftop views of the plaza for free once you're inside.
💡 Start at the Hotel Nacional end, walk east towards Havana Vieja during late afternoon when the breeze picks up. Watch for crumbling seawall sections after storms.
💡 Take a bus or taxi from central Havana (about 15 mins). No security or fences around it; it's a regular neighbourhood park. Best visited late afternoon when it's cooler and the sun makes the bronze glow. The nearest cafe sells decent iced coffee.
💡 Skip the overpriced audio guide. Bring small CUP notes for the locked donation boxes in some rooms. The Granma Memorial outside (the yacht used in the 1956 landing) is free to view through the fence; you can see it from outside the museum grounds.
💡 Arrive by 8pm on Thursday or Friday to avoid huge queues. Pay in CUP at the door if you have it; the card machine sometimes fails. Check their Facebook page for schedule changes.