If you visit Cuba, and especially its capital: Havana, you will see that it has a unique, eclectic architecture, full of elements from the past, accompanied by others from the present. A mixture of antiquity and modernity united in a city where time refuses to pass.
There are constructions that from the time of the Spanish colony on the island, still see the passing of its winds: churches, castles, colonial visitor houses, all with their original attributes.
Such is the case of the Cathedral of Havana, from 1778, which today maintains all its architectural elements, and which is a fundamental attraction for all visitors and tourists who come to the island.
When you walk through the streets of the "historical center", you will recognize interesting facades, built at the beginning of the last century. Today they are still functional and serve as housing for the inhabitants of the place. Deteriorated by corrosion and time, they refuse to go unnoticed by anyone passing by.
Finally, within all these ancient architectural elements, the most modern buildings are represented, generally hotels that serve to reinforce tourism as one of the main lines of the economy. Full of technology, modernity and luxuries, they live alongside their ancestors, and adorn a city that, without rejecting or renouncing its historical attributes, gives way to new features, giving the city a unique image, worthy of be visited.
As an element to reinforce the passage of time in this photographic series, I used the long exposure of the clouds in particular, varying the exposure time according to the light conditions. I HOPE YOU LIKE THE PHOTOS for the #monomad challenge