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Bacardi Building

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The Bacardi Building ( Edificio Bacardí ) is an Art Deco Havana landmark designed by the architects Esteban Rodríguez-Castells and Rafael Fernández Ruenes and completed in 1930. It is located on the corner of Calles Monserrate and San Juan de Dios on a 1,320 m (14,200 sq ft) lot in Las Murallas, Old Havana .

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8-642: Bacardi Building may refer to: Bacardi Building (Havana) , building in Cuba Bacardi Building (Mexico City) , building in Mexico Bacardi Buildings (Miami) , buildings in US Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Bacardi Building . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

16-470: The Bacardi company invited a number of architects to present their design proposals for a new headquarters building offering 1,000 pesos to the winner. The competition was made up of a panel of judges that included Henri Schueg Chassin, president of Bacardi, and the architects Leonardo Morales y Pedroso , the architect for Colegio Belen , Enrique Gil, Emilio de Soto, and Pedro Martínez Inclán. The first prize

24-404: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bacardi_Building&oldid=1062335265 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Bacardi Building (Havana) The Bacardi Building

32-419: The peak of the building (47m) is a bronze sculpture of the company logo, a fruit bat. Its design gives the building a unique chromatic effect and a decorative element of Catalan modernism . At the brim of the building are inflected flat panel sculptures of sirens. The first floor contained a bar with column archways where patrons of the restaurant in the mezzanine area could overlook the bar while they dined. It

40-420: Was awarded to architects Esteban Rodríguez-Castells and Rafael Fernández Ruenes. José Menéndez Menéndez was the architect-engineer in the project. Construction of the building started on January 6, 1930, and was completed by the 300-day deadline the company had set for December. Poor conditions of the land required that the foundation use piles of hardwood (jiqui and júcaro negro) and high strength concrete . At

48-498: Was carried out by the company Grasyma of Wansiedel, Bavaria of Germany, which took great care in the fine details of the work and the time-sensitivity of the project deadline. The property has a cistern with capacity for 8,700 US gallons (33,000 L; 7,200 imp gal) of water, which pumped into a tank inside the tower with capacity for 4,800 US gallons (18,000 L; 4,000 imp gal). In addition, it has four elevators for different uses: two are used for passengers with

56-618: Was designed to be the headquarters for the Bacardi Rum Company; it was nationalized by the Castro government in the early 1960s. In 2001, the building was restored by an Italian construction firm. The interior retains the original decorations in marble and granite. It is regarded as one of the finest Art Deco buildings in Latin America. The building was the outcome of an architectural design competition . The owners of

64-422: Was open to the public and known to have many celebrities who frequented. Most of the marble and granite were imported from Europe: Germany, Sweden, Norway, Italy, France, Belgium and Hungary. With an area of 1,075 sq. meters and 7.25 meters of support, the first floor walls, floor, and ceiling are adorned in pink granite from Bavaria, and the two halls are of green marble from floor to ceiling. The construction work

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