Coppelia (ice cream parlor)

Coppelia is an ice cream parlor chain in Cuba, named after the ballet Coppélia. Originally built in a project led by Fidel Castro, Coppelia is state-run and sells in Cuban pesos (CUP). Havana's Coppelia employs more than 400 workers and serves 16,000 litres (4,200 US gal) of ice cream to 35,000 customers each day.[1]

Coppelia
IndustryFood Processing
FoundedJune 4, 1966; 57 years ago (1966-06-04)
HeadquartersVedado, Havana City, Cuba
ProductsIce cream

When business started in 1966, it ran with a count of 26 flavors and 25 combinations.[2] Today, lines are generally long and the supply and selection of flavors is scarce, with usually only one or two available at any given time.[3][4]

History edit

Coppelia was originally built in a project led by Fidel Castro. Fidel's longtime secretary, Celia Sánchez, named Coppelia after her favorite ballet Coppélia.[1]

The site of the first Coppelia was originally taken by the Reina Mercedes Hospital, which functioned from 1886 to 1954 when it was demolished. Originally, there were plans to build another hospital on the site, but plans later changed and a 50-story skyscraper was to be built on the site, but all these plans fell through. A tourism promotion pavilion, Parque INIT, then occupied the site, then the Centro Recreativo Nocturnal (night-time entertainment center), before Coppelia finally took over.[citation needed]

Mario Girona was the architect of the new ice cream palace built on the site in 1966. The building was influenced by the biomorphic modernism of Italian, Mexican and South American modernists like Pier Luigi Nervi, Felix Candela and Oscar Niemeyer, who saw the opportunity to leave behind the rectangular forms of the steel high rises and utilize the plasticity of reinforced concrete. Populist ideology helped shape the design and use of the public space.[1]

Expansion edit

In March 2012 Venezuela announced plans to cooperate with Cuba to build a Coppelia ice cream plant in the country and introduce sales of the product there.[5] In April of the same year the Cuban newspaper Trabajadores ran an article exposing the scarcity and poor quality of the product as well as the inattentive service at the parlor, despite the recently completed renovations. Among the problems were broken freezers.[4][6]

Havana location edit

Havana's Coppelia is a Cuban Revolution modernist building. It features five white granite discs annexed to one great helicoidal staircase, with wood and tinted glass division panels, all under one big round roof supported by twelve reinforced concrete arachnid columns. The flying-saucer-shaped building represents a UFO and is one of the largest ice cream parlors in the world.[7] Holding a maximum of 1000 guests, it is located on the part of Calle 23 known as La Rampa in the Vedado district, and occupies the entire city block between Calles 23 and 21, and Calles K and L.

Coppelia Havana has been a major city landmark for both locals and visitors since its opening in 1966, but acquired additional fame when it was featured in one of the most widely viewed Cuban films, Strawberry and Chocolate.[8]

The park area surrounding the building features lush groundcover and a canopy of towering banyan trees which provide shade for open-air dining areas. Curvilinear paths lead to an elevated circular pavilion inside of which the only indoor seating is located.[1]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "A California Architect Visits Cuba", Patrick McGrew, KCET-TV (PBS Los Angeles), August 8, 2012
  2. ^ "The Decline of Coppelia, Cuba's Largest Ice Cream Parlor". Havana Times.org. 13 August 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  3. ^ "Coppelia", Frommers
  4. ^ a b Sundred Suzarte Medina, "Con bolas huecas no hay jonrón", Trabajadores, April 1, 2012 Archived February 10, 2013, at archive.today
  5. ^ Neuman, William (23 March 2012). "Cuban Ice Cream Headed to Venezuela". The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
  6. ^ "Avanza reparación de la heladería Coppelia", Trabajadores, 2 July 2012
  7. ^ Boudreaux, Richard (November 5, 1991). "Culture : Castro's Revolutionary Cry: Let Them Eat Ice Cream!". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 6, 2013.
  8. ^ Brendan Sainsbury, Cuba (Lonely Planet guide), p.139