Development Design
Hotels and Politics in the Hispanic Caribbean
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pittsburgh Press
Published:4th Nov '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Illustrates How Tourism is Bound to Larger Histories of Colonialism and Plantation Economies
Underneath picturesque views of palm trees, fruity cocktails in hotel lounges, and day trips to preserved colonial zones lies a history of tourism design that intersects with larger projects of development and national and cultural identity formation.
Underneath picturesque views of palm trees, fruity cocktails in hotel lounges, and day trips to preserved colonial zones lies a history of tourism design that intersects with larger projects of development and national and cultural identity formation. Locating modernity and coloniality as the key framework within which tourism development takes place, Development Design focuses on hotel design and its relation to larger urban and rural landscapes to uncover the way these seemingly carefree spaces are bound to local politics and international relations. Focusing on three sites in the Hispanic Caribbean—San Juan, Ciudad Trujillo, and Havana—Morawski traces different attitudes and approaches to tourism and its material design through five hotels that serve as case studies. Through examination of wicker chairs and lobby interiors, architecture and landscaping, public works and urban planning, Development Design illustrates the integral role hotel design played in negotiated and contested histories of development in Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, and Cuba.
Richly illustrated and well written, Development Design contributes new insights by highlighting how hotels in the Hispanic Caribbean were not merely symbols of imperial imposition or touristic fantasy but were also instrumental in driving innovations in modern hotel design and projects of nationalism and geopolitics. Morawski’s work is a comprehensive and carefully studied investigation of Caribbean architecture in its historical context.
-- Joseph Hartman, University of Missouri–KansasISBN: 9780822948605
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
282 pages