Havana (WPB)
```mediawiki Havana (WPB) is a culturally concentrated area within West Palm Beach, Florida, recognized informally for its Cuban-American commercial presence and community life. Centered primarily along Okeechobee Boulevard between Dixie Highway and Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard, the area is not a formally designated municipality or historic district. The name "Havana" reflects the concentration of Cuban-owned businesses, restaurants, social clubs, and residences that developed there over the course of the 20th century. A separate establishment also bearing the Havana name — Havana Restaurant — operates in nearby Lake Worth and is a distinct venue unrelated to this neighborhood designation.
Accuracy and scope note
The term "Havana (WPB)" is used informally by residents and local media to describe a Cuban-American cultural corridor within West Palm Beach. It does not correspond to any officially recognized neighborhood boundary in city planning documents, nor is it listed as a designated historic district by the Florida Department of State, Division of Historical Resources.[1] Readers seeking formal municipal boundaries should consult the City of West Palm Beach's official planning department records.[2] The boundaries described in this article reflect general community usage rather than any official demarcation.
History
The Cuban presence in West Palm Beach has roots stretching back to the early decades of the 20th century. Following the Cuban War of Independence and the political turbulence that followed, Cuban immigrants began arriving in South Florida in search of economic opportunity. Many initially found work in Palm Beach County's agricultural industry, and later in the service and tourism sectors that expanded rapidly as Palm Beach developed into a winter resort destination for wealthy Americans.
Early Cuban settlers established small businesses along Okeechobee Boulevard, laying the groundwork for what would become a recognizable Cuban commercial corridor. Restaurants, social clubs, and Roman Catholic parish communities served as anchors for the growing immigrant population, providing social infrastructure that helped newcomers adapt while preserving their language and traditions.
The Cuban Revolution of 1959 triggered the most significant wave of Cuban immigration to South Florida. Hundreds of thousands of Cubans fled the island following Fidel Castro's rise to power, and while Miami's Little Havana absorbed the largest share of the arriving population, Palm Beach County — including West Palm Beach — received a steady influx of Cuban families, professionals, and entrepreneurs throughout the 1960s and 1970s.[3] This second wave brought doctors, lawyers, teachers, and small business owners who expanded the Cuban community's economic reach well beyond its original working-class base. By 1970, the Cuban-born population of Palm Beach County had grown measurably enough that local Catholic diocesan records noted Spanish-language masses being added at several parishes to serve the new arrivals.
By the late 20th century, the Okeechobee Boulevard corridor had developed a distinct character, with Cuban-owned businesses clustered closely enough to give the area a coherent cultural identity. The informal name "Havana" gained wider use as the neighborhood became a recognizable destination for Cuban food, music, and community gatherings.
Cuba's ongoing energy and economic crises in the 2020s — including a severe island-wide blackout in October 2024 that left the entire country without power for days[4] — have driven new waves of Cuban emigration to South Florida. Palm Beach County has received a share of these more recent arrivals, adding younger, often more economically desperate immigrants to a community whose earlier generations had arrived as political exiles with professional credentials. The distinction between these migration cohorts shapes social dynamics within the West Palm Beach Cuban-American community today.
Geography
Havana (WPB) is not a geographically defined municipality or officially recognized district with strict boundaries. It is a culturally concentrated area within West Palm Beach, primarily situated along Okeechobee Boulevard, extending from approximately Dixie Highway to Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard. The neighborhood is relatively flat, typical of much of South Florida, and is characterized by a mix of residential and commercial properties.
The area's location provides convenient access to major transportation arteries, including I-95 and Okeechobee Boulevard, connecting it to other parts of West Palm Beach and Palm Beach County. Proximity to the downtown core and the Palm Beach Lakes commercial district contributes to its accessibility. The neighborhood's built environment features a blend of older single-family homes — many dating to the mid-20th century — and commercial strip development characteristic of postwar Florida urbanism. Mature shade trees along residential side streets provide some buffer from the commercial activity along the main boulevard.
Demographics
Palm Beach County's Hispanic and Latino population has grown substantially over the past several decades. According to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey, Cuban and Cuban-American residents make up a notable share of the county's Hispanic population, concentrated particularly in West Palm Beach and its immediate surroundings.[5] The Cuban-American population in Palm Beach County skews older in its established layers, reflecting the post-1959 exile generation and their U.S.-born children and grandchildren, while more recent arrivals from Cuba's economic crisis of the 2020s have introduced a younger demographic cohort into the community.
Unlike Miami-Dade County, where Cubans constitute a politically dominant and numerically dominant ethnic bloc in several municipalities, the Cuban-American community in West Palm Beach exists alongside a more diverse Hispanic population that includes large Puerto Rican, Mexican, and Central American communities. This demographic context shapes the political and commercial character of the Okeechobee Boulevard corridor in ways that distinguish it from Miami's Little Havana.
Culture
Cuban culture defines the character of the Okeechobee Boulevard corridor in ways that are immediately apparent to visitors. Cuban restaurants, bakeries, and specialty grocers line the commercial stretches, and Cuban coffee — strong, sweet, and served in small cups — is available at counters throughout the area. Traditional music, including son cubano and salsa, can be heard from restaurants and social club events, particularly on weekends.
Community organizations and social clubs have historically played a central role in preserving Cuban traditions. Domino games, a staple of Cuban social life, are a common sight at local clubs. Cultural events including live music performances and holiday celebrations draw residents from across Palm Beach County. The observance of Three Kings Day (Día de Reyes) on January 6 is among the more prominent community celebrations, reflecting the Cuban Catholic tradition of marking Epiphany as a gift-giving holiday comparable in importance to Christmas.
Religious life centers on Roman Catholic parishes, which have long served dual roles as spiritual institutions and social meeting points for Cuban and Cuban-American families. The strong emphasis on extended family networks and community solidarity characteristic of Cuban immigrant culture is reflected in the neighborhood's social patterns, where longtime residents often know one another across multiple generations.
Art galleries featuring Cuban and Cuban-American artists, cigar shops, and businesses specializing in imported Cuban products contribute to the area's identity. The cigar trade has particular resonance given Cuba's historical reputation for premium tobacco, and several shops in the corridor offer hand-rolled cigars and related goods.[6]
Political and civic life
Cuban Americans in the West Palm Beach area are politically engaged, particularly on questions related to U.S. policy toward Cuba. In 2025, more than 100 local Cuban Americans gathered in West Palm Beach to publicly support stronger U.S. action against the Cuban government, reflecting a pattern of political activism common among South Florida's Cuban exile community.[7] Sentiment within South Florida's Cuban-American community has historically leaned toward strong anti-communist positions, and many residents in the West Palm Beach Cuban community have maintained active ties to exile political organizations.[8]
Voter registration and turnout among Cuban Americans in Palm Beach County reflect the community's broader political engagement. While Miami-Dade's Cuban-American precincts — particularly in Hialeah — have shown strong alignment with the Republican Party in recent election cycles, the Cuban-American population in Palm Beach County has exhibited a somewhat more varied partisan distribution.[9] This divergence may reflect the different socioeconomic composition of the two counties' Cuban populations, as well as the greater ethnic diversity of Palm Beach County's overall electorate.
Cuba's worsening internal conditions have also reinforced political solidarity within the local Cuban exile community. The U.S. government's energy-related sanctions, and their effect on daily life in Cuba — including rolling blackouts that have shut down businesses, hospitals, and homes — are closely followed by West Palm Beach Cuban Americans, many of whom have family still on the island.[10]
Attractions
The neighborhood's appeal to visitors lies primarily in its authentic Cuban food and cultural atmosphere rather than large-scale tourist infrastructure. Cuban restaurants along Okeechobee Boulevard serve traditional dishes including *ropa vieja* (shredded beef in tomato sauce), *lechón asado* (slow-roasted pork), and *moros y cristianos* (black beans and rice). Many of these restaurants feature live music on weekend evenings. Cuban bakeries offer *pastelitos* (flaky pastry turnovers filled with guava or meat), *pan cubano* (Cuban bread), and *café cubano*.
Cigar shops in the area provide an opportunity to sample hand-rolled cigars and learn about the tobacco traditions that Cuba's industry established over centuries. Art galleries present work by Cuban and Cuban-American painters and sculptors, offering a cultural dimension beyond food and commerce.
The neighborhood's proximity to other West Palm Beach destinations — including the Norton Museum of Art and the Clematis Street entertainment district — makes it a practical stop within a broader visit to the city. Regular street festivals and cultural events, organized by local community groups, bring additional foot traffic and visibility to the corridor.
Havana Restaurant (Lake Worth)
A separate establishment named Havana Restaurant operates in nearby Lake Worth, roughly five miles south of the Okeechobee Boulevard corridor in West Palm Beach. It is an entirely distinct venue with no organizational connection to the informal West Palm Beach neighborhood designation. The Lake Worth restaurant is known locally for its refined atmosphere and attentive service, and it draws diners from across Palm Beach County. Local dining guides and community recommendations frequently cite it as a destination worth distinguishing from the broader Havana (WPB) cultural corridor — the two share a name rooted in the same cultural heritage but serve different purposes and clienteles.
Economy
The Okeechobee Boulevard corridor's economy is driven primarily by small, independently owned businesses. Restaurants, bakeries, cigar shops, specialty grocers, and professional services firms catering to Spanish-speaking residents make up the bulk of commercial activity. These businesses collectively employ a significant number of local residents and draw customers from across Palm Beach County.
Community loyalty plays a meaningful role in sustaining these businesses. Many Cuban-American customers make a point of patronizing businesses owned by community members, a pattern that reinforces the corridor's economic cohesion even as larger commercial competitors operate nearby. The entrepreneurial tradition within the Cuban immigrant community — shaped in part by the experience of business owners who rebuilt their livelihoods after leaving Cuba — remains a cultural value that continues to produce new small business formation.
Cuban-owned coffee brands have also expanded beyond the corridor's immediate geography. Havana Roasters Coffee, a South Florida–based brand with roots in the Cuban-American coffee culture of the region, announced expanded U.S. and European distribution in 2025 through a logistics partnership with ShipMonk, a Palm Beach County–based fulfillment provider.[11] That kind of commercial reach — from a neighborhood corridor into international markets — reflects the broader economic ambition that has characterized Cuban-American entrepreneurship in South Florida for decades.
Investment interest in the Okeechobee Boulevard area has grown in recent years alongside broader West Palm Beach development activity. New businesses and property renovations have appeared, attracting a more diverse customer base while creating tension between economic revitalization and the preservation of the corridor's Cuban cultural identity. Competition from chain retailers and restaurants poses an ongoing challenge to independent operators.[12]
Transportation
Havana (WPB) is accessible by car via Okeechobee Boulevard, which runs east-west through the neighborhood and connects directly to I-95. Street parking is available along commercial blocks, though it can be limited during peak hours and community events. Palm Tran, Palm Beach County's public bus system, operates routes along Okeechobee Boulevard and connecting streets, providing service to and from Downtown West Palm Beach and other county destinations.[13]
Palm Beach International Airport (PBI) is located approximately four miles from the Okeechobee Boulevard corridor, a drive of roughly 10 to 15 minutes depending on traffic. Ride-share services operate throughout the area. For residents of adjacent neighborhoods, the corridor is reachable on foot or by bicycle via local streets.