Sancti Spiritus is a city in Central Cuba. Founded in 1514, it is among the oldest Spanish settlements in Cuba and has a number of colonial era buildings.
Understand
editEscambray[dead link], is the local periodical.
Get in
editViazul provides several buses a day from Camagüey, Havana, Santa Clara and Santiago de Cuba. There is also service to Trinidad and Varadero.
There is an overnight train to/from Havana on alternate days, and there may be a (very) early morning train to Santa Clara and Cienfuegos that returns in the afternoon. Sancti Spiritus is not on the main line. Check that the trains are running in advance.
- 1 Sancti Spíritus railway station.
Get around
editSee
editSights in Sancti Spiritus include:
- 1 Parroquial Mayor church. The oldest church in Cuba.
- 2 Colonial Art Museum (Museo de Arte Colonial). Displays 19th Century furniture in a huge house that once belonged to the Valle-Iznaga family
- The bridge over the Rio Yayabo, built by the Spanish in 1815
- Street market along Calle Llano, which is paved with cobblestones (just east of the museo de Arte Colonial)
- Fundacion de la Naturaleza y El Hombre, located off the Parque Maceo in the northern part of the city centre, which documents the 17,422-km canoe trip from Equador to Barbados led by Cuban writer Antonio Nunez Jimenez in 1987.
Do
editTake a walk through the historical centre of the city, starting from the train station in the south and ending at the Parque Maceo in the north.
Buy
editEat
editDrink
editSleep
editThere are two hotels in Sancti Spiritus -- the Hostal del Rijo off the Plaza Honorato and the Hotel Plaza off the Parque Serafin Sanchez. Both are in historical colonial buildings.
There are about two dozen casa particulares to choose from. Touts will meet all incoming buses and happily escort you to a casa.