
Museo de la Revolución
Meilleur moment pour visiter
Early morning to avoid heat and school-group visits, or late afternoon for softer light on the rooftop and fewer crowds.
Conseils budget
Modest entry fee paid at the ticket office in local currency; student and senior discounts often available, check at the desk. Museums sometimes offer free admission on national holidays, so verify local schedules and bring small cash for guides and souvenirs.
Recommandé pour
History buffs, Students of political history, Architecture lovers, Photography enthusiasts
Planifiez votre visite
1-2 hours
À propos
Faits rapides: Stepping through the grand courtyard, you encounter gleaming presidential cars and intimate personal items that make the revolutionary era feel startlingly immediate. Surprisingly, the collection exceeds a thousand objects, from guerrilla gear to ornate state regalia, revealing both myth and the messy human stories behind power.
Points forts: Step into a former presidential palace where a bullet-pocked office holds the original walnut desk topped by a faded typewriter and a stamped photograph of Fidel Castro, the smell of old paper and varnish rising from the glass cases. Behind a glass wall, a row of eight parade cars gleams under yellowed lights, and local guides whisper about a quirky tradition of rubbing a small brass plaque for luck before revolutionary anniversaries.
Conseils d'initiés
- Wear lightweight, respectful clothing and comfortable shoes for marble floors and stairs.
- Arrive when the museum opens to tour ground-floor exhibits before guided groups arrive.
- Ask at the desk for an English map or a licensed guide; their context brings the displays to life.
- Head to the rooftop terrace late afternoon for panoramic photos of Capitolio and the Malecon, allow time to queue.
Infos pratiques
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Avez-vous entendu parler des visites à pied gratuites ?
Après avoir voyagé dans plus de 30 pays, il y a une chose que j'aurais aimé qu'on me dise dès le premier jour, et cela a complètement changé ma façon de découvrir les nouvelles villes.
Les visites à pied gratuites. Oui, vraiment gratuites. Pas besoin de carte de crédit. Pas de piège.
Guide local, 2-3 heures
Sites majeurs, trésors cachés, histoires locales
100% basé sur les pourboires
Les guides ne gagnent que des pourboires, ils donnent donc le meilleur d'eux-mêmes
Vous donnez le pourboire que vous jugez juste
À la fin, donnez simplement le pourboire que vous jugez juste
J'ai fait ces visites dans des dizaines de villes et elles ont été le point fort de presque tous mes voyages. Si vous visitez Havana, Cuba, faites-le le premier jour. Vous me remercierez plus tard.




