Trip coincides with President Obama’s visit to Cuba
From its island greenery and beautiful, clear beaches – to its vintage American cars and aged architecture – Havana, Cuba, is a place where few American college students have explored in more than 60 years.
But now that diplomatic relations have been restored between both countries, students from 鶹Ƶ’s College of Architecture and Environmental Design and its have an opportunity unlike any other.
“It was really cool to go where no one has ever gone from the states,” says Casey Poe, graduate student from 鶹Ƶ’s Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative. “We are some of the first students down there, and I think the first architecture students in the country, to be able to visit Cuba.”
The group spent six days learning the culture, seeing firsthand the needs of restoring an aging waterfront and reimagining the current Nico Lopez Oil Refinery as a future neighborhood.
After mapping out the area, the students created a master plan to convert some of the space into much-needed housing and to create a community with shared public space, while preserving the culture, history and identity.
They even drew similarities to restoring the Cleveland waterfront. They say both communities have limited dollars to preserve buildings, and both value using creativity to reuse and repurpose existing architecture.
“That’s a challenge that both cities are working hard to address and reveal these opportunities,” says David Jurca, associate director at 鶹Ƶ’s Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative.
Throughout their trip, the students were amazed by the people’s friendliness.
“I think a lot of people have the conception that they don’t like Americans,” says Megan Mitchell, graduate student at 鶹Ƶ’s Cleveland Urban Design Center. “I didn’t feel that way at all.”
The students say they especially felt welcomed at the ballpark, where President Barack Obama was visiting at the same time, making him the .
“That was really neat,” Poe says about seeing Obama. “I’ve never seen him before. We weren’t super close, but I was like, ‘there’s the president and his whole family.’”
The visit, the neighborhood master plan, the relationships and the connections that the group made along the way are just the start of what 鶹Ƶ hopes to continue with Cuba in the future.
It remains to be seen whether the Nico Lopez Oil Refinery will close in the near future. However, if it does, the 鶹Ƶ students hope to return one day to see their designs implemented in a nation that most Americans were restricted from visiting for half a century.