Bank of Nova Scotia Building | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Occupied |
Type | Bank-office |
Architectural style | Neoclassical |
Location | Habana Vieja |
Address | Calles O´Really y Cuba |
Town or city | Ciudad de La Habana |
Country | Cuba |
Coordinates | 23°08′22.82″N 82°21′8.28″W / 23.1396722°N 82.3523000°W |
Estimated completion | 1906 |
Renovated | 2014 |
Technical details | |
Structural system | Steel frame |
Floor count | 4 |
Website | |
www |
Bank of Nova Scotia Building, Havana is a Neoclassical-style bank building located at the intersection of Calle O´Reilly and Calle Cuba in old Havana.
Built in 1906, the building was branch and business offices for Canadian-based Bank of Nova Scotia in the early 20th century. Additional floors were added in 1914 to the original two-floor building. It also served as a Scotiabank's branch in Havana and sold to a local bank Banco Metropolitano S.A. (founded 1996).[1]
Once one of the most important foreign banks in Cuba, Scotiabank is one of the few foreign banks allowed to retain offices in the country after 1959.[1] Today Scotiabank focusses on business banking (after approval in 2011[2]) and no longer operates banking branches (ceased in 1959 when all non-Cuban banks closed operations and transferred to Banco Nacional de Cuba) in Cuba.[3][4]
Rival Royal Bank of Canada operated in Cuba from 1899 with 24 branches (from high of 65 in the 1920s) when it was forced to sell their operations in 1960.[5] A former branch building in Havana and is being renovated since 2012 after sitting vacant[6]