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La Habana Province - Wikipedia

  • ️Sat Feb 03 2024

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other uses of "La Habana", see Havana.

Greater Havana

Zona Metropolitana de la Ciudad de La Habana




1. The chinese borough of the cityside of Havana

2. The inside look of the Havana Airport

3. The agrarian university of Havana
(in the Mayabeque Region)

4. The road that leads to Beach Giron and the Province of Matanzas

CountryCuba
RegionWestern
Most populous cityHavana Cityside
(2,148,032 inhabitants in the year 2008)
FoundationMarch 1878
Center of governmentHavana Cityside
Government
 • MayorReinaldo García Zapata
Area

• Total

8,475.57 km2 (3,272.44 sq mi)
Highest elevation219 m (719 ft)
Population

 (2022)[2][3]

• Total

2,137,847
 • Density250/km2 (650/sq mi)
Demonymhabaneros-habaneras
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
Area code+53-47
HDI (2019)0.834[4]
very high · 1st of 16
Websitewww.cubagob.cu

La Habana Province [la aˈβana] , formerly known as Ciudad de La Habana Province, is a province of Cuba that includes the territory of the city of Havana, the Republic's capital. The province's territory is the seat of the superior organs of the state and its provincial administration.

Between 1878 and 2010, the name referred to a different province that covered a much larger area, and after 1976 restructuring, the then-La Habana Province did not include the city of Havana. The larger province was subdivided in 2010 into the present-day provinces of Artemisa (which also took over three municipalities from Pinar del Río) and Mayabeque.

The Province of Havana was created in 1878, is one of the 6 original provinces in which the island was divided, still under Spanish colonial rule.

In the political administrative division of 1976, in which the country was divided into 14 provinces, the original Province of Havana was divided into Havana City Province (Ciudad de La Habana; the capital) and Havana Province (areas surrounding the capital). Havana City Province integrated the territories of the metropolitan region of the capital, including Havana, Marianao, Guanabacoa, Regla, and Santiago de las Vegas. From 1976 until 2010, the provincial administration of Havana Province had its headquarters located in Havana City Province, since it lacked a capital of its own.

On August 1, 2010, the National Assembly made another modification of the territorial organization of Cuba, segmenting the then-Province of Havana (the areas surrounding the capital), colloquially called "Habana Campo", in two new provinces; Artemisa Province to the west, and Mayabeque Province to the east.[5] With this change, which went into effect as of January 1, 2011, Havana City Province became known simply as Havana Province, as differentiation was no longer needed. Additionally, three municipalities of Pinar del Río Province (Bahía Honda, Candelaria and San Cristóbal) were transferred to the new Artemisa Province.

The actual municipalities of the Havana Province. The red colored municipalities (which acts as boroughs) are the original City of Havana while the rest in green are municipalities that combine to be part of the Metropolitan Havana and Province.

Before 1961, Havana was the official name only of the central municipality of a conurbated area that included at least 6 municipalities: Havana, Marianao, Regla, Guanabacoa, Santiago de las Vegas and Santa María del Rosario-Cotorro. Currently, the territory that occupies the old municipality of Havana (former Villa of San Cristóbal de La Habana) is divided into 6 municipalities (Plaza de la Revolución, La Habana Vieja, Centro Habana, Diez de Octubre, Cerro, Arroyo Naranjo), and Boyeros (Altahabana). The city, as it is conceived at the present time, includes all the provincial territory, also includes the territories of 9 municipalities that were not part of old Havana municipality, which are: Playa, Marianao, La Lisa, Guanabacoa, Regla, Habana del Este, San Miguel del Padrón, Cotorro and Boyeros.[citation needed]

Municipio Population Area (Km2) Density
Arroyo Naranjo

200,451

82

2,445 / km2

Boyeros

188,217

130

1,448 / km2

Centro Habana

140,234

3

46,745 / km2

Cerro

122,999

10

12,300 / km2

Cotorro

77,066

66

1,168 / km2

Diez de Octubre

206,052

12

17,171 / km2

Guanabacoa

115,180

129

893 / km2

La Habana del Este

174,493

141

1,238 / km2

La Habana Vieja

87,772

4

21,943 / km2

La Lisa

136,231

37

3,682 / km2

Marianao

134,529

22

6,115 / km2

Playa

179,647

35

5,133 / km2

Plaza de la Revolución

147,789

12

12,316 / km2

Regla

42,420

10

4,242 / km2

San Miguel del Padrón

153,066

26

5,887 / km2

Total in the City (Proper) 1,093,514 253 4,322/ km2
Total in the Province 2,106,146 719 2,929/ km2
Municipality Sections, neighborhoods and towns
Arroyo Naranjo Poey, Santa Amalia, Mantilla, La Palma, Víbora Park, Los Pinos, Managua, Calvario, Güinera, Eléctrico, Párraga.
Boyeros Santiago de las Vegas, Rancho Boyeros, Calabazar, Abel Santmaría, Fontanar, Wajay, Altahabana, Capdevila, Aldabó.
Centro Habana Cayo Hueso, Dragones (Barrio Chino), Colón, Los Sitios, Pueblo Nuevo.
Cerro El Cerro, Casino Deportivo, Las Cañas, Palatino, El Canal.
Cotorro Santa María del Rosario, Cotorro, Cuatro Caminos, Alberro.
Diez de Octubre Víbora, Santos Suárez, Lawton, Luyanó, Sevillano, Vista Alegre, Tamarindo.
Guanabacoa Guanabacoa, Chibás, D'Beche, Minas, Barreras, La Jata.
La Habana del Este Alamar, Camilo Cienfuegos, Guiteras, Villa Panamericana, Cojímar, Guanabo, Boca Ciega, Campo Florido.
La Habana Vieja Barrios del casco histórico, Tallapiedra
La Lisa La Lisa, Alturas de la Lisa, Arroyo Arenas, Punta Brava, Arimao, El Cano, San Agustín, La Coronela.
Marianao Los Quemados, Pogolotti, Los Pocitos, Santa Felicia, El Palmar, Belén, Zamora, Coco Solo.
Playa Miramar, Buenavista, La Ceiba, La Sierra, Kolhi, Siboney, Atabey, Santa Fe, Jaimanitas, Flores, Cubanacán, Almendares.
Plaza de la Revolución El Vedado, Nuevo Vedado, Príncipe, Plaza, Puentes Grandes.
Regla Regla, Casablanca.
San Miguel del Padrón San Miguel, Diezmero, Alturas de Luyanó, Rocafort, San Fco. de Paula, Jacomino, California, Juanelo, La Rosalía, La Fernanda.

Source: Oficina Nacional de Estadísticas 2010[6]