Starwood manages hotel in Cuba

U.S. hospitality giant runs lodging owned by military

A vintage car passes in front of the Four Points by Sheraton hotel in Havana on Tuesday. American hotel giant Starwood has begun managing the hotel, owned by the Cuban military.
A vintage car passes in front of the Four Points by Sheraton hotel in Havana on Tuesday. American hotel giant Starwood has begun managing the hotel, owned by the Cuban military.

HAVANA -- American hospitality giant Starwood began managing a hotel owned by the Cuban military on Tuesday, opening one of the biggest holes in the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba since Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro declared detente in Dec. 2014.

The facade of the 186-room Quinta Avenida hotel in Havana's upscale Miramar neighborhood has been emblazoned with the logo of Starwood's Four Points by Sheraton business travel brand and travelers can now book rooms through Starwood's website.

The Obama administration permitted the deal with a special Treasury Department license, and Starwood announced it on the eve of President Obama's March visit to Cuba. The stated intention of Obama's normalization of relations with Cuba is creating more freedom for ordinary Cubans to operate independently of their single-party government, which maintains control of most aspects of the centrally planned economy.

Allowing a high-profile U.S. corporation to work hand-in-hand with the Cuban military shows both the Obama and Castro governments' eagerness to build as many economic ties as possible before the president leaves office, said Robert Muse, a Washington-based expert on U.S. law on Cuba.

"It certainly goes further and faster than anyone contemplated," Muse said. "The Cuban government proved that it can quickly and decisively deal with the U.S. hospitality sector. No reason they can't do it again and again and again."

The hotel is being gradually refurbished and equipped with new beds, linens and other amenities. The 180-member Cuban staff has been re-trained by a team of 15-20 Starwood managers from other countries over the last few weeks and will be permanently supervised by about five Starwood managers under the terms of the contract.

Starwood officials said they were investing millions in the rehabilitation of the hotel. They declined to provide a more specific figure.

Visitors to Cuba frequently complain about the poor quality of the infrastructure and service in government-run hotels, and online reviews of the pre-Starwood Quinta Avenida offered a sampling of the challenges the company faces.

Though interspersed with some praise, comments ranged from "hallways with dirty carpets full of dust and a wet smell" to "crickets and cockroaches in some parts of the hotels show that they weren't cleaning much."

A Gaviota representative declined to comment Tuesday but Pablo Casal, the hotel's general manager, said he was pleased with the quality of the hotel staff.

"What we're finding is a willingness to understand what we expect and apply it," he said. "We're working very hard, above all, to provide the service that our guests expect."

In the midst of a boom in tourism to Cuba, the hotel is running at about 80 percent occupancy. Casal said he hoped to complete the renovation by the end of the year. In the meantime, reservations will come with a disclaimer that the hotel is undergoing rehabilitation.

Business on 06/29/2016

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