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The mansion has been featured in [[Architectural Digest]], ''Six Days in Havana'' by [[James A. Michener]], was also heavily featured in Maria Luisa Lobo Montalvo's "Havana", was the cover picture for Michael Connors' book "Cuban Elegance", was also the cover for "I Was Cuba: Treasures from the Ramiro Fernandez Collection" by Kevin Kwan, and is heavily featured in dozens of other books celebrating Cuban architecture.
The mansion has been featured in [[Architectural Digest]], ''Six Days in Havana'' by [[James A. Michener]], was also heavily featured in Maria Luisa Lobo Montalvo's "Havana", was the cover picture for Michael Connors' book "Cuban Elegance", was also the cover for "I Was Cuba: Treasures from the Ramiro Fernandez Collection" by Kevin Kwan, and is heavily featured in dozens of other books celebrating Cuban architecture.


La Mansión was expropriated from the [[Pollack]] family by the Cuban government in the beginning of the [[Cuban Revolution]] and was abandoned and allowed to deteriorate. In the 1990s, it was restored to its original splendor at a cost of over $2,000,000 and is now rented by the Cuban government for its important guests. The Mansion along with the Pollack Building in Havana are still claimed by the Pollack family, who were US citizens at the time the buildings were confiscated by the Castro government.
La Mansión was expropriated from Elena Aguilera Pollack (daughter of Mark Pollack), Guillermo Vicente Aguilera (her husband and Senator from Camaguey, Cuba) and their children, Elena, Alina and Guillermo who had title and resided at the property until they were exiled by the Cuban government to The United States in the beginning of the Cuban Revolution. The property was leased to the Brazilian Embassy until Brazil broke relations with the Castro government, after which it was abandoned and allowed to deteriorate. In the 1990s, it was restored to its original splendor at a cost of over $2,000,000 and is now rented by the Cuban government for its important guests. The Mansion in Havana is still claimed by Elena Echarte Aguilera Pollack, Alina Farinas Aguilera Pollack and the estate of Guillermo Aguilera Pollack and their heirs, who currently reside and are citizens of The United States of America. .


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 21:45, 19 July 2010

La Mansión de Mark Pollack in 1931.

La Mansión de Mark Pollack, is a neo-classical Florentine mansion in the Cubanacan Section (fka Country Club section) of Havana, Cuba built in 1930 by the Cuban architect, Leonardo Morales y Pedroso (1887–1965). It is located at 21st street #15001, Cubanacan, Havana, Cuba.

It was built for Mark A. Pollack-Rothschild (1878–1952), the American born patriarch of a wealthy Cuban tobacco dynasty and covers an area of 13,000 square meters. It is one of the crown jewels of Cuban architecture and one of the most significant work of Cuban Eclecticism due to its temperate lines, and ornaments with no parallel in the modern and contemporary architecture. It has large rooms and is surrounded by extensive gardens, which in the past were arranged in a formal manner. Mr. Pollack-Rothschild, painted a series of panels referring to the discovery of America which were placed around the main hall, but due to the deteriorated state of them when the Cuban government decided to restore the home, they were lost forever. This hall is extraordinary due to its size (approximately 48 feet (15 m) long and 24 feet (7.3 m) wide and high), the organ which took up one of its ends, the wooden balcony placed at half the height of the other end, and the iron grilles which lead to the portico, which is the main element of the facade facing the garden. This portico has three arcades supported by double columns and a richly decorated arched ceiling. The central courtyard is exceptional for Cuban house architecture in the 20th century, due to its size and the fact that it is completely surrounded by a porticoed gallery, the columns of which are all different kind of marble on both floors. His Majesty, The King of Spain, Juan Carlos de Borbón was scheduled to stay at La Mansión during his visit to Cuba in 1999 for the IX Ibero-American Summit, however the King refused to stay at the Mansion out of respect for the Pollack family who have been close friends with the king dating back many years. Henry Pollack contacted the Spanish consulate in Coral Gables, Florida to inform the King that the family would not mind his staying there, however other arrangements had already been made. The mansion has been featured in Architectural Digest, Six Days in Havana by James A. Michener, was also heavily featured in Maria Luisa Lobo Montalvo's "Havana", was the cover picture for Michael Connors' book "Cuban Elegance", was also the cover for "I Was Cuba: Treasures from the Ramiro Fernandez Collection" by Kevin Kwan, and is heavily featured in dozens of other books celebrating Cuban architecture.

La Mansión was expropriated from Elena Aguilera Pollack (daughter of Mark Pollack), Guillermo Vicente Aguilera (her husband and Senator from Camaguey, Cuba) and their children, Elena, Alina and Guillermo who had title and resided at the property until they were exiled by the Cuban government to The United States in the beginning of the Cuban Revolution. The property was leased to the Brazilian Embassy until Brazil broke relations with the Castro government, after which it was abandoned and allowed to deteriorate. In the 1990s, it was restored to its original splendor at a cost of over $2,000,000 and is now rented by the Cuban government for its important guests. The Mansion in Havana is still claimed by Elena Echarte Aguilera Pollack, Alina Farinas Aguilera Pollack and the estate of Guillermo Aguilera Pollack and their heirs, who currently reside and are citizens of The United States of America. .

References

  • Inside Cuba (Taschen, Spain 2006 ISBN 3-8228-4597-3)
  • Havana, Cuba: An Architectural Guide (A.G. Novograf, S.A., 1998, ISBN 84-8095-143-5)
  • Cuban Elegance (Harry N. Abrams, 2004, ISBN 0810943379)
  • Havana: History and Architecture of a Romantic City (Monacelli Press, 2000, ISBN 1580930522)
  • La Habana Arquitectura del Siglo XX, Eduardo Luis Rodriguez (Blume, 2001) ISBN 978-8489396173 Template:Es icon