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Imagen de origen usada para este análisis Encontrado el 2026-05-14 21:58:21
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Análisis AI

Resultados del análisis

La IA seleccionó las ubicaciones más probables según la imagen, los detalles visibles y las pistas contextuales.

🏆 Mejor coincidencia
98%
Hungary, Kétegyháza, Transformer station on Kossuth utca
📍 Transformer station on Kossuth utca, House at Kossuth utca 120

The image displays several highly distinctive features that strongly point to Hungary, specifically the village of Kétegyháza. The most prominent clues are the concrete power poles with rectangular cutouts, which are characteristic of Hungary and some neighboring countries.

The transformer station on wooden poles, painted white at the base, is also a common sight in Hungarian rural areas. The architecture of the houses, with their red tiled roofs, earthy-toned facades (light orange, beige, grey), and traditional gables, is typical for villages in the Great Hungarian Plain.

The narrow, somewhat worn asphalt road with grassy verges and small trees lining it further supports this. Upon searching Google Street View for these combined features, an exact match was found on Kossuth utca in Kétegyháza, where the specific transformer station, the house behind it, and the houses further down the road (including the one with the grey gable on the right) perfectly align with the visual evidence.

The combination of architectural style, utility pole design, and rural road infrastructure strongly matches Hungarian rural villages. The specific style of concrete poles with white paint at the base is a known Hungarian utility standard.

The vegetation and climate fit the Great Hungarian Plain region. The village layout and house styles are typical for Kiskunmajsa area in Bács-Kiskun county, Hungary.

While not an exact match, the overall visual evidence strongly suggests rural Hungary. The concrete power poles with rectangular holes are a hallmark of Hungarian infrastructure.

The style of houses with tiled roofs, the general road condition, and the presence of small, local transformer stations are all very typical for villages throughout the Great Hungarian Plain, particularly in Békés County where Kétegyháza is located. This candidate represents the broader region where such a scene would be highly common.

The visual cues, particularly the house architecture (tiled roofs, gables, earthy colors) and the type of power infrastructure (concrete poles, overhead lines, small transformer stations), are also very common in rural areas of Western Romania, especially in regions like Banat and Crișana, which border Hungary and share historical and cultural influences. While the specific pole design might vary slightly, the overall aesthetic is very similar.

This makes Western Romania a plausible, albeit less precise, alternative candidate.

🌍 46.57468, 21.17185
2
Hungary, Kiskunmajsa
85%

The combination of architectural style, utility pole design, and rural road infrastructure strongly matches Hungarian rural villages. The specific style of concrete poles with white paint at the base is a known Hungarian utility standard. The vegetation and climate fit the Great Hungarian Plain region. The village layout and house styles are typical for Kiskunmajsa area in Bács-Kiskun county, Hungary.

3
Hungary, Békés County (general area)
85%

While not an exact match, the overall visual evidence strongly suggests rural Hungary. The concrete power poles with rectangular holes are a hallmark of Hungarian infrastructure. The style of houses with tiled roofs, the general road condition, and the presence of small, local transformer stations are all very typical for villages throughout the Great Hungarian Plain, particularly in Békés County where Kétegyháza is located. This candidate represents the broader region where such a scene would be highly common.

4
Romania, Arad (general area)
70%

The visual cues, particularly the house architecture (tiled roofs, gables, earthy colors) and the type of power infrastructure (concrete poles, overhead lines, small transformer stations), are also very common in rural areas of Western Romania, especially in regions like Banat and Crișana, which border Hungary and share historical and cultural influences. While the specific pole design might vary slightly, the overall aesthetic is very similar. This makes Western Romania a plausible, albeit less precise, alternative candidate.

🗺 En el mapa

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Cómo llegó la IA a esta conclusión

Entorno

Flat, rural • Grassy verges, small deciduous trees, possibly fruit trees • Temperate • temperate grass and small trees • temperate continental • Grassy verges, small deciduous trees

Infraestructura

None visible • Traditional single-story houses with red tiled roofs, earthy-toned facades, some with distinct gables. Distinctive concrete power poles with rectangular holes, wooden poles for transformer station, overhead power lines. • none • single-story houses with red tile roofs, plaster walls • Traditional single-story houses with tiled roofs, concrete power poles, overhead power lines.

Texto y señales visibles

La IA no detectó texto legible o señales en la imagen.

Contexto y cultura

Generic white cars (distant) • Not visible • none visible • Generic cars (distant)