Valls, who founded Versailles restaurant in Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood, died this past Saturday at 89.
Over the course of half a century, Valls grew his business. The entrepreneur started his career trajectory in Miami importing espresso machines from Italy and Spain. He raised enough money to purchase a small restaurant in Little Havana called Badia’s and sold it to open Versailles.
Valls’ restaurant holding company, Valls Group, owns more than 30 restaurants including the La Carreta chain, Casa Juancho, MesaMar, and Casa Cuba. But Valls will forever be best known for Versailles.
Through Versailles, Valls introduced Miami to the ventanita, a walk-up window that serves coffee and sandwiches. That ventanita — and Versailles — has become more than a restaurant. It has become the unofficial gathering place for Cuban-Americans to protest and celebrate.
When Barack Obama was re-elected for a second Presidential term, there were protests outside Versailles, with cars draped in “Fire Obama” banners.
And when Fidel Castro died on November 25, 2016, thousands flocked to Versailles to wave the Cuban flag, bang on pots, and toast the death of the notorious dictator with a cafecito.
Versailles was also a required stop for politicians wanting to woo Miami’s Cuban community. In 2016, Donald Trump and Rudy Guiliani stopped by, unannounced, for a cafecito and a photo op.
Valls Sr. passed the business into the hands of his son, Felipe Valls Jr., who is the current CEO and president of Valls Group.
The elder Valls leaves behind his son Felipe Jr., daughters Leticia and Jeannette, and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
The family will host a visitation at Caballero Rivero Funeral Home (3344 SW Eighth St., Miami) on Wednesday, December 7, from 5 to 10 p.m. and Thursday, December 8, from 1 to 10 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the Valls family requests donations to be made to the Jackson Health Foundation.
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