| El Helicoide | |
|---|---|
| Caracas, Venezuela | |
| Site information | |
| Type | Office building, prison |
| Owner | |
| Operator | |
| Controlledย by | Ministry of Interior, Justice and Peace |
| Condition | In service |
| Location | |
![]() | |
| Coordinates | 10ยฐ29โฒ22โณN 66ยฐ54โฒ36โณW๏ปฟ / ๏ปฟ10.4894ยฐN 66.9099ยฐW |
| Site history | |
| Built | 1961 |
| Inย use | 1984 |
| Events | Crisis in Venezuela |
El Helicoide is a building in Caracas, Venezuela, owned by the Venezuelan government and used as a facility and prison for both regular and political prisoners of the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN).[1] In the shape of a three-sided pyramid, it was originally constructed as a shopping mall, but never completed.[1]
During the Nicolรกs Maduro administration, El Helicoide became a high-profile prison for political detainees where systemic torture and human rights violations have taken place.[1] Prisoners have reported "people being beaten, electrocuted, hung by their limbs, forced into stress positions and forced to plunge their face into a bag of faeces and breathe in".[2]
History
editEl Helicoide is built on a hill in Roca Tarpeya between the parishes of San Pedro and San Agustรญn, in the extension of the avenues Armed Forces, President Medina Angarita, and Nueva Granada. It has the shape of a three-sided pyramid with curved points formed by elevated paved roads intended for vehicle traffic and parking around an enclosed central area.
Concept
editIts construction was undertaken by a private company during the government of then-president Marcos Pรฉrez Jimรฉnez in 1956. It was designed by the architects Pedro Neuberger, Dirk Bornhorst and Jorge Romero Gutiรฉrrez. The project was to have included 300 boutiques, eight cinemas, a heliport, a 5-star hotel, a park, a club of owners and a show palace on the seventh level.[1][3] The building would include a 4ย km long ramp spiraling around the structure itself, allowing vehicles to enter the building and park inside. The project would have cost $10 million in 1958, or $90 million in 2018.[3]
In preparation for the project, many families were evicted from shanty towns in San Agustรญn and had their homes demolished.[3]
Cancellation
editFollowing the 1958 Venezuelan coup d'รฉtat which resulted in the overthrow of dictator Marcos Pรฉrez Jimรฉnez, developers were accused of being funded by Pรฉrez Jimรฉnez's government.[3] The incoming government refused to allow the mall's construction and litigation surrounding the project began involving the developers, businesses and the government.[3] Nelson Rockefeller made offers to take over the project, but regulations resulted in the withdrawal of his proposal.[3] By 1961, construction of the building came to a halt after the development firm fell into bankruptcy one year before completion.[3] That same year the project was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.[3]
In 1965, attempts were made to resume its construction to complete it by 1967, though plans fell through.[4] Over time, only the concrete foundation of the project was present while equipment destined for the cancelled mall was stolen, including custom high-speed Austrian elevators.[3]
Government facility
edit
In 1975, the Venezuelan government acquired the facility.[3] Between 1979 and 1982, 10,000 squatters occupied the facility until they were evicted.[3] By 1982, only the geodesic dome with its aluminum top on the concrete infrastructure was completed.
From 1984, some state agencies were gradually installed in the building,[1] the most important of which was the Directorate of Intelligence and Prevention Services (DISIP). In 1985, DISIP purchased a 15-year lease for the lower two floors of El Helicoide, where prison cells are presently located.[3] The building was seriously affected by a bombing in the 1992 Venezuelan coup d'รฉtat attempts and an anti-aircraft response from it. The dome was later repaired following these events.
Bolivarian Revolution
edit| External videos | |
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Since 2010, part of the building serves as the headquarters of the National Experimental Security University (UNES). As unrest grew surrounding the Nicolรกs Maduro government, offices, storerooms and even lavatories were converted into makeshift holding areas for the growing number of prisoners.[1] Prisoners describe it as a place where systematic torture and human rights violations occur.[1] The role of El Helicoide in Venezuelaโs political context has been documented by various organizations, including Human Rights Watch and the Foro Penal. These entities have reported on the conditions inside the building and linked them to a pattern of alleged human rights violations in the country.[5][6]

On 16 May 2018, a prison riot occurred in El Helicoide, with several political prisoners arrested during the protests; Venezuelan authorities fired tear gas and buckshot at individuals in the area.[7][8] Among the inmates was the American Joshua Holt; the U.S. Embassy in Caracas expressed concern that Holt and other U.S. citizens were in danger.[9]
Closure
editFollowing the capture of Nicolรกs Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores during the U.S. military operation on January 3, 2026, Delcy Rodrรญguez assumed the interim presidency. In the days that followed, President Donald Trump publicly announced that a โtorture chamber in the heart of Caracasโ was being shut down, referring explicitly to El Helicoide. Trump described it as part of efforts to dismantle the repressive apparatus of the previous regime, calling it a โtorture centerโ and linking it to abuses against opponents.[10]
At the same time, the interim government announced the release of a โsignificant numberโ of political prisoners (Venezuelans and foreigners) as a โunilateral gesture of peace.โ Human rights organizations confirmed releases, with family members gathered outside the building awaiting further releases. Some sections of the complex began to empty, with reports of transfers and dismantling operations. However, there is no definitive official confirmation from the interim Venezuelan authorities of a total closure or complete dismantling.[11]
On January 30, 2026, Delcy Rodrรญguez confirmed the facilityโs closure and its transformation into a sports and cultural center for the security forces. At the same time, during the opening ceremony of the judicial year before the Supreme Court of Justice, the president announced a draft general amnesty law that would theoretically cover all cases since the arrival of Chavismo in 1999. The scope of the bill would cover not only political prisoners but also drop criminal charges against numerous exiled political leaders.[12]
Cells
editEl Helicoide originally had a cell known as "Preventive I" in its Access Area, also known as "Infiernito" (Little Hell), with dimensions of 3 x 5 meters and where new arrivals were held. By 2014, it was the only cell of this type, but when detentions began to increase, three additional areas were created later, known as "Preventive II", "Preventive III" and "Preventive IV". By 2015, Preventiva I was intended for common prisoners, while the other three cells were intended for students, Twitter users and "guarimberos".[13] One of the largest cells in El Helicoide was referred to as the "Guarimbero" cell, itself an annex of the "Guantรกnamo" cell. While "Guantรกnamo" held the majority of non-political detainees, detainees arrested during protests or opposition were incarcerated in the "Guarimbero" cell. Both cells have been overcrowded and in very poor conditions, with no access to water or toilets, and where inmates have had to sleep on the floor.[14][13]
Dimensions
edit- Total area: 101,940 m2
- Built area: 77,748 m2
- Commercial premises: 46,715 m2
- Roads and green areas: 29,192 m2
- Exhibition and industry area: 8.445 m2
See also
edit- La Tumba (Caracas)
- Casa de los Sueรฑos
- Vรญctor Navarro
- Enforced disappearances in Venezuela
- Political prisoners in Venezuela
- Torture in Venezuela
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Velandia, Karenina and Charlie Newland (24 January 2019). "El Helicoide: From an icon to an infamous Venezuelan jail". BBC News. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
- ^ Graham-Harrison, Emma (15 September 2017). "Downward spiral: how Venezuela's symbol of progress became political prisoners' hell". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Olalquiaga, Celeste (10 February 2019). "El Helicoide: The architectural wonder that now sums up Venezuela's spiral into despair". CNN Style. Retrieved 11 February 2019.
- ^ "El Helicoide continรบa siendo un veremos". รltimas Noticias (in Spanish). 30 June 2002. Archived from the original on 2 October 2002.
- ^ "Venezuela: Political Prisoners Cut Off from the World | Human Rights Watch". 22 September 2025. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ Suarez, Mariela (27 January 2026). ""Disfrutaban de cada acto que realizaban": detenidos describen el horror de las "cรกrceles de tortura" de Maduro". Foro Penal (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ "Presos de El Helicoide denuncian bombardeo de lacrimรณgenas y piden presencia de Fiscalรญa y Defensorรญa (Audio)". La Patilla (in European Spanish). 16 May 2018. Retrieved 17 May 2018.
- ^ Camacho, Carlos (16 May 2018). "Venezuela Political Prisoners Riot as National Guard & Police Surround Nefarious Prison (VIDEO)". Latin American Herald Tribune. Archived from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 17 May 2018.
- ^ "American Joshua Holt, freed from Venezuela, describes nightmare of prison". NBC News. 5 June 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ Sulbarรกn, Patricia; Wagner, James (9 January 2026). "What Is El Helicoide, the Infamous Torture Prison in Venezuela?". The New York Times. ISSNย 0362-4331. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ "Venezuela says it is releasing an 'important number' of political prisoners". NBC News. 9 January 2026. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ Cano, Regina Garcia (31 January 2026). "Venezuela announces amnesty bill that could lead to mass release of political prisoners". AP News. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ a b (Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Venezuela 2022, p.ย 87)
- ^ (Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Venezuela 2020, p.ย 90)
Sources
edit- Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Venezuela (15 September 2020). Conclusiones detalladas de la Misiรณn internacional independiente de determinaciรณn de los hechos sobre la Repรบblica Bolivariana de Venezuela [Detailed findings of the independent international fact-finding mission on the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela] (PDF) (in Spanish).
- Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Venezuela (12 September 2022). Crรญmenes de lesa humanidad cometidos a travรฉs de los servicios de inteligencia del Estado: estructuras y personas involucradas en la implementaciรณn de un plan para reprimir la oposiciรณn al gobierno [Crimes against humanity committed through the State intelligence services: structures and individuals involved in the implementation of a plan to repress opposition to the government.].
External links
edit- Video of torture at El Helicoide, from ABC Spain
