Local transportation options are a little different than in your home country
The students and staff posing for a picture in beautiful Havana
Drinking some local Cuban coffee
Mimicking the street art
Old school car
A little cup of coffee to put a jolt in your day
Relaxing on a walkway near the ocean
Eating in a local café
The courtyard of the palace
A walk through the museum
Office space of the great Cuban historian of Habana Emilio Roig
The palace's main room
Havana’s largest plaza, Plaza de la Revolución (Revolution Plaza), forms the administrative center for Cuba, dating back to the 1950s
Plaza de San Francisco
Plaza de San Francisco is the second oldest square in the city
Daily life in the old square (Plaza Vieja) has many attractions for both Cubans and tourists visiting the Cuban capital, as there are numerous activities, such as street theater and music, visual arts activities and circus acts
The Plaza de la Catedral (Cathedral Square) is one of the most valuable historical sites in the city, especially for its majestic early 18th century houses
This monumental structure of Jose Marti was inspired by the architecture then popular in Fascist Europe and was built 1954–1957 as the Palace of Justice. Today, it is where the Castro brothers and Council of Ministers work out their policies of state.