Miami -a set of images disseminated in social networks, has brought to light the interiors of the mansion known as “Nave Pilar”located in Varadero and used by leaders of the Cuban regime after confiscation.
Built in 1948 as the residence of former president Ramón Grau San Martín, he was expropriated after the revolutionary triumph and turned into a rest house for Fidel Castro, his brother Raúl Castro, and more recently for the ruler Miguel Díaz-Canel.
Nave Pilar, located in the tourist cast of Kawama, has approximately 14,000m² in front of the sea and includes a private dock, swimming pools, gym, sauna, game room, smart showers and industrial kitchens. The finishes are marble, with armored glass, central air conditioning and state permanent surveillance.
The influencer Darwin Santana published the unpublished images of this property and explained how the Cuban regime allocated a millionaire figure for the remodeling and reconditioning of the facilities of his holiday house, while Cuba crossed a deep health, educational and transport crisis.
“Revolutionary investment”
The most recent remodeling of this mansion was in 2011, it would have cost more than 6 million dollars, although specialists estimate a real value that exceeds one hundred million in the current market, said the Ciber Cuba news portal.
“Nave Pilar also has a catamaran so that the hierarchy on duty and his family retouch on the Cuban coasts.”
Previously, the house was also temporarily occupied by the artist “Kcho”, protected from the Castro regime, who inhabited her with her family for several years.
These revelations occur in a context in which most Cubans face blackouts, water and gas scarcity, housing deterioration and a stagnant economy. The contrast generated criticism in social networks, where users qualify these residences as a symbol of the privilege of the political dome against the sacrifices imposed on the Cuban population, plunged into obligatory poverty.