Plaza de la Revolución

Monumento y Museo José Martí

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The massive Monumento José Martí on the south side of the Plaza de la Revolución sits atop a 30-meter-tall base that is shaped as a five-pointed star. It is made entirely of gray granite and marble and was designed by architect Enrique Luis Varela. It predates the Revolution, having been completed in 1958. To each side, great arching stairways lead to an 18-meter-tall (59-foot) gray-white marble statue of national hero José Martí sitting in a contemplative pose, like Rodin’s The Thinker.

Behind looms a 109-meter-tall marble edifice stepped like a soaring ziggurat from a sci-fi movie. It’s the highest point in Havana. The edifice houses the Museo José Martí (tel. 07/59-2351; Mon.–Sat. 9 a.m.–4:30 p.m.; entrance CUC3, cameras CUC5, videos CUC10). Among the exhibits are first-edition works, engravings, drawings, and maps, as well as reproductions of significant artifacts in Martí’s life.

New Age music plays in the background, drawing you to a multiscreen broadcast on the Wars of Independence and the Revolution. An art gallery features portraits of Martí. For an additional CUC2 you can take an elevator to the top of the tower for a 360-degree view over Havana.

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