Club Náutico

Club Náutico de Marianao
Arches at Club Nautico, 1953
Former names Club de las Panteras
General information
Type Recreation
Architectural style Modern
Location Miramar, Playa
Address 5ta Avenida y 152
Town or city Ciudad de La Habana
Country Cuba Cuba
Inaugurated 1953
Owner Carlos A. Fernández Campos
Dimensions
Diameter 20'
Technical details
Structural system Arches
Material Reinforced concrete
Floor count 1
Design and construction
Architect Max Borges Recio
Known for El Tropicana

Club Náutico (Nautical Club) was originally built in the 1920s and expanded in 1936 by its owner Carlos Fernández. Guests paid a modest fee (.10 cents), eventually there were more than five thousand subscribers. Fernández had in addition to the enjoyment of a short beach, a dance floor with an orchestra.[1] By the 1950s, an increase in membership necessitated expansion of the original premises in 1953 and Max Borges-Recio designed a set of porticos covered by vaults similar to the ones he recently had designed for the Tropicana. It is located at Terminus of 152, Nautico, Playa, Havana, Cuba.

Architecture

Borges used two types of arches, a Catenary arch, similar to those of the Tropicana, and a smaller, parabolic arch. Both types of arches are suspended from above by two reinforced concrete arches of corresponding shape. There is a color differentiation between the smooth, blue of the architectural covering arch and the white structure of the arch above. The arches at the Club Náutico lack the architectural and structural purity he achieved at the Tropicana as most of the arches there are self supporting for the most part. Here as in the Tropicana Borges used the difference in height between arches to insert a clear glass skylight. The floors are polished concrete.

References

  1. "¿Quién salvará las playas del oeste de La Habana?". Retrieved 2018-10-10.


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