Coppelia

Ice cream shop · Havana

Coppelia

Ice cream shop · Havana

3

2111 Calle L, La Habana, Cuba

Photos

Coppelia by null
Coppelia by Karl-Sebastian Schulte (CC BY 2.0)
Coppelia by Bit Boy (CC BY 2.0)
Coppelia by Bit Boy (CC BY 2.0)
Coppelia by vxla (CC BY 2.0)
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null
Coppelia by null

Highlights

Coppelia, a retro ice cream paradise in Havana, offers a uniquely nostalgic experience with its UFO-like design and a taste of Cuba’s creamy past.  

Placeholder
Placeholder
Placeholder

2111 Calle L, La Habana, Cuba Get directions

Information

Static Map

2111 Calle L, La Habana, Cuba Get directions

Features

Last updated

Mar 4, 2025

Powered By

You might also like

Terms of Use • Privacy Policy • Cookie Policy
 © 2025 Postcard Technologies, Inc.
@onthegrid

"Copellia is a Vedado institution. Established by the communist government as a place for locals to get absurdly cheap ice cream, it became a spot for socializing and family outings. People wait in line for hours, but they say they that's part of the experience. As a foreigner, lines are shorter, but prices higher." - Noah Friedman-Rudovsky

On the Grid : Coppelia Ice Cream
View Postcard for Coppelia park
@atlasobscura

"In Cuba, you don’t have to look far to find an ice cream joint. But the aging citadel of cold confections known as Coppelia is the Alpha and Omega of the Cuban ice cream craze. Commissioned by Fidel Castro in an effort to bring the tasty phenomenon to his people, the sprawling, retro-modern helado complex has seen better days, but it continues to serve up thousands of scoops every day. Located in Havana, Coppelia was originally built in 1966 at the behest of Castro himself, who was notoriously interested in dairy products and sought to produce more quality flavors of ice cream than America. In truly grandiose fashion, the ice cream compound was erected on the site of an old hospital in the bustling Vedado district and designed to look like a sort of UFO, with long concrete spokes radiating from the top of the structure, surrounded by a park and assorted seating covering an entire city block. Coppelia was named after a 19th century comedy ballet by Celia Sánchez, Castro’s secretary and close confidant, who took charge of the project. Never has a communist dream of eating ice cream in the bowels of a stylized spaceship been more fully realized. In the early days, Coppelia offered 26 different flavors including such heady delights as orange-pineapple, coconut with almonds, and muscatel. Flavors were often mixed and matched in multi-scoop sundaes their eager customers couldn’t get enough of. Coppelia continued to grow and other locations opened around the country, but the central mothership never lost its iconic appeal.   Over the years, the political tides have altered Coppelia’s offerings in different ways, as the price and availability of ingredients wax and wane, but through it all, the site has survived, becoming a “people’s park.” In the 1990s when trade fluctuations meant the country had to decide between dairy resources for butter or ice cream, ice cream won out. Coppelia still serves thousands of scoops each day to the hordes of people lined up for an “ensalada” (five scoops in a bowl), many of whom order more than one. According to some modern accounts, the number of flavors on offer are usually around three (of varying quality), down from the 50 or so offered during the shop’s heyday. Yet that hasn’t slowed Coppelia’s popularity. For all of the political, social, and economic influences on Coppelia’s significance, the simple truth is: Cuba’s hot, and ice cream’s not." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

Around the World in 14 Unique and Historic Ice-Cream Shops
View Postcard for Coppelia park
@atlasobscura

"In Cuba, you don’t have to look far to find an ice cream joint. But the aging citadel of cold confections known as Coppelia is the Alpha and Omega of the Cuban ice cream craze. Commissioned by Fidel Castro in an effort to bring the tasty phenomenon to his people, the sprawling, retro-modern helado complex has seen better days, but it continues to serve up thousands of scoops every day. Located in Havana, Coppelia was originally built in 1966 at the behest of Castro himself, who was notoriously interested in dairy products and sought to produce more quality flavors of ice cream than America. In truly grandiose fashion, the ice cream compound was erected on the site of an old hospital in the bustling Vedado district and designed to look like a sort of UFO, with long concrete spokes radiating from the top of the structure, surrounded by a park and assorted seating covering an entire city block. Coppelia was named after a 19th century comedy ballet by Celia Sánchez, Castro’s secretary and close confidant, who took charge of the project. Never has a communist dream of eating ice cream in the bowels of a stylized spaceship been more fully realized. In the early days, Coppelia offered 26 different flavors including such heady delights as orange-pineapple, coconut with almonds, and muscatel. Flavors were often mixed and matched in multi-scoop sundaes their eager customers couldn’t get enough of. Coppelia continued to grow and other locations opened around the country, but the central mothership never lost its iconic appeal. Over the years, the political tides have altered Coppelia’s offerings in different ways, as the price and availability of ingredients wax and wane, but through it all, the site has survived, becoming a “people’s park.” In the 1990s when trade fluctuations meant the country had to decide between dairy resources for butter or ice cream, ice cream won out. Coppelia still serves thousands of scoops each day to the hordes of people lined up for an “ensalada” (five scoops in a bowl), many of whom order more than one. According to some modern accounts, the number of flavors on offer are usually around three (of varying quality), down from the 50 or so offered during the shop’s heyday. Yet that hasn’t slowed Coppelia’s popularity. For all of the political, social, and economic influences on Coppelia’s significance, the simple truth is: Cuba’s hot, and ice cream’s not. None" - EricGrundhauser, mocchiatto

Coppelia – Havana, Cuba - Gastro Obscura
View Postcard for Coppelia park

Raymond Del Papa

Google
Have been to the Havana and Santa Clara Coppelia. Both were very enjoyable both in atmosphere and flavor. The night we went to the Santa Clara Coppelia, a group of teenage students were having a fashion show. It added an additional interest to the great ice-cream and atmosphere.

Xiao Tan

Google
Nothing about this place is easy, but you come here for the atmosphere of being in the biggest ice cream shop in the world. We had a great time with our kids, but we had had tempered expectations and knew fully that there is a long wait and the standard level of "service" you can expect at government-run businesses like this in communist / socialist countries. My kids were very keen to come here but it was closed twice when we drove by on week days. Seems to be only open reliably on weekends. On our last day in Havana, we came by on a Sunday afternoon. Five lines with ~20 people in each line, and the security guards estimated 30+ minutes waiting outside in each line. Walk inside and chatted with the security guy asking about the lines in Spanish - was told that it was 30-60 minutes in line unless we had Cuban pesos, where 300-400 would get us an immediate seat upstairs. We paid 400 Cuban pesos = $1.15 USD and were immediately helped upstairs into one of the 5 seating areas where other locals were waiting. Is this fair? No, but this is not at all unique to this place or this country. Once seated in an area upstairs, the service was all equal with other locals sitting there. Roughly 10 minute wait to be asked our order. We bought 9 scoops total, which was 87 Cuban pesos = $0.25 USD. Another 15 minutes to get the order. I would recommend ordering more to avoid having to wait after ordering more. Was the ice cream amazing? No, but the building was pretty amazing, and my kids loved the experience. The picture of the ice cream is an "ensalata", which includes 5 scoops, after two scoops were eating and some melted. The flavors available vary by the day. When we were there, the flavors were coconut, butter, and chocolate. Everyone there was very friendly! Among experiences available to tourists, this felt like a unique place that is much more frequented by locals (maybe 100 to 1). It's extremely different from other "sights" in Havana.

Qiang Qian

Google
Coppelia is supposed to be an experience... Let me share mine. 1. There are several queues outside. We waited 15 min there. 2. Once we got in, we were directed to seat in the closest area to our entrance. We only discovered that there are other area in the center building. 3. We waited about 25 more mins for them to serve the ice cream. There's no menu and we couldn't pick what to get. They had only 3-scoop chocolate in a plate. The four of us asked for 2 of them. 4. When we paid, the waitress asked around for 2 min and finally decided that we should pay 90 pesos. Later we read on the menu in front of the center building that 3-scoop was 27 pesos each. Were we treated specially? You decide. 1 star for us.

Daniel Hommrich

Google
This is a terrible place - and that's why I liked it! No service that would deserve that name, you'll get what they have. The ice-cream is good, but just vanilla the day we were here. Served without love in a plastic tray. But it's so cheap, you could call it free (like, 0,50 € for 5 scoops). It's so depressing, you'd want to lick the toilet seat just to get this life over with. Come with the right expectation and you'll like this place. Come expecting an ice cream café with service and a selection and what not and you'll give one star.

Alessandro Gres

Google
This is an experience. While the ice cream itself is delicious (we recommend the mix, it's 5 scoops) the real reason for coming here is the total uniqueness of this place. Be prepared for a bit of queuing and small selection of flavours, although they vary from day to day (my first time there was chocolate and vanilla, the next time only chocolate). Soak up the vibe around you, for many getting ice cream here is a special occasion so you will see many smiling faces despite a somewhat slow service. As one of the only state-run ice cream parlours in the world, stuck in another era, you will leave knowing you had an out of worldly experience!

Ramiro Calás (Rammay)

Google
Nice place and good ice cream. Good service, but they need more variety.

Peter Herka

Google
Waiting in the cue more than one hour? No way, there are many other places in Havana offering excelent and safe icecream, just keep your eyes open.

Leo Kovač

Google
Service is terrible, but the ice cream is pretty good.