By RONAN MCGRATH
Cuba's car population looks frozen in time.
Havana lies 90 miles south and 50 years from the Florida coast. It's a 
beautiful place, filled with crumbling buildings dating back as far as 
the 16th century, a promenade that rivals that of Nice, France, and 
music that plays from 10 a.m. to dawn the next day.
Next year will mark the 50th anniversary of Fidel Castro's accession to 
absolute power--which is when Cuba entered an automotive time warp. 
Nowhere else on the planet can you see an endless variety of vintage 
cars on the street every day.
Within five minutes of leaving the airport I saw a first-generation 
Buick Roadmaster, a Soviet-era GAZ truck, a 1957 Hillman Minx, a white 
'54 Cadillac Eldorado convertible… the show never stopped. Cuba has a 
young population, and it is fascinating to see so many people cruising 
around in cars older than their parents.
Indeed, Cuba's varied political history is reflected in the automotive 
population. The '40s and '50s were times of great wealth (though 
unevenly distributed) in Havana--with casinos, mansions and villas, a 
car ferry from Florida, and multiple daily Pan Am flights hauling 
gamblers to and from the island.
All of that activity brought with it expensive cars. Today, Cadillacs 
and Buicks are common survivors, though I also ran across Packard 
Caribbeans, an Edsel convertible and a Studebaker Golden Hawk. A 
surprising number of British cars also survive, including dozens of Ford 
Consuls and Zodiacs, Hillmans and Austins.
Extensively altered stretch limos are also here, as well as the largest 
number of working station wagons and Chevrolet Suburbans from the early 
'50s I have ever seen. Heavily overpainted woodies from the '50s are 
common sights, as are the massively finned '59-vintage Dodges and 
Chevrolets.
Time stands still
That's where the line breaks. All business in Cuba was nationalized in 
1959, and the wealthy fled overnight, leaving lots of their wheels 
behind. The next, much-reduced supply of cars seems to have come from 
France and Italy, and you can still see many Peugeot 403s and 404s, the 
odd tiny Renault 4CV or Fiat 500, and quite a few Fiat 126s, though they 
are typically in worse condition than their American predecessors.
As the Soviet Union began its first steps into mass production, 
Ladas--built on obsolete Fiat 124 production lines bought from 
Italy--began to appear in large quantities in Cuba. Today, they are the 
most common cars in Havana.
I also ran across a number of Moskvitches, some Romanian ARO 4x4s and a 
few '60s Skodas. Many of the trucks are also Soviet sourced, though 
older Chevy and Dodge pickups are common.
What every car in this wild mix has in common is home maintenance. Cars 
are often painted with house paint--a vile shade of blue was in obvious 
overabundance. Exhaust notes tell the story of plenty of old Plymouths 
that now roll with four-cylinder Lada power.
Bondo is everywhere; roadside repairs are the norm. Radios and 
instruments are long removed, and many cars sit on higher and harder 
suspensions than new. You'll see old Caddy or Austin jacked up on any 
given side street, surrounded by an array of tools, the owner's feet 
sticking from underneath.
Yet they run seemingly forever.
No sports cars
The experience of seeing so many of these street survivors creates a 
feeling of unreality; you expect to see "I Love Lucy" on the TV and hear 
Elvis on the radio.
There are no sports cars are here, but auto buffs are: You see images of 
the Ferrari prancing horse tacked to sides of an occasional Chrysler New 
Yorker or Chevy Bel Air. Exotic cars were here. I have seen photos of a 
Mercedes-Benz 300SL Gullwing coupe rotting somewhere in a garden. Is it 
possible that out on this island there lays the odd Maserati or Bentley 
Continental remains, hidden in a barn? Perhaps.
Getting a ride in an old car is as easy as hailing a taxi. I grabbed a 
1957 Mercury convertible and toured. The driver proudly told me that the 
motor was original, but he had personally converted the transmission 
from an auto to a floor shift. We drove the graceful embassy 
district--where the wealthiest once lived. The shock of the revolution 
is visible when the Russian embassy's massive mushroom-cloud-shaped 
high-rise suddenly appears, dominating all around it.
Beautiful as Cuba is, this remains a highly controlled society; more 
than one person whispered a confided desire to leave it by any means 
possible.
In Old Havana there is an auto museum--no more than a large warehouse 
with unrestored cars from the '30s that includes a V16 Caddy and a 
Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost. I could make out a dusty Mercedes 190SL 
convertible stuck behind an indifferent Plymouth. The museum can't 
compete with what rolls outside.
A modern future?
The regime under Fidel Castro's brother, Raul, is slowly loosening its 
iron grip--Cubans are allowed cell phones and access to hotels formerly 
limited to foreigners. Economic reform will, without doubt, come 
eventually, and with it will come investment. Foreign capital will flow, 
and the magnificent buildings will be restored. As prosperity returns, 
the decrepit cars, not valuable or original enough to restore, will 
simply disappear, and we automotive enthusiasts will lose the one 
remaining place in the world where such large fleets of living 
history--patched and endlessly repaired--still toil daily.
As access reopens to Americans, it will be possible to take a quick, 
fleeting trip back into the '50s, to when these were just cars, not 
overpolished classics, and to see them do what they were meant to do, 
providing transport for ordinary people.
They are slow, battered, old things now, but I would bet a story exists 
in each--from the glittering days of the '50s through half a century of 
shade tree mechanics, and some day to the end of their long and 
incredibly productive lives.
When that door opens, don't miss the chance.
Ronan McGrath is an AutoWeek contributor
http://www.autoweek.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080718/FREE/844003623
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