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Imagem fonte usada nesta analise Encontrado em 2026-05-11 23:16:46
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Analise IA

Resultados da analise

A IA selecionou os locais mais provaveis com base na imagem, detalhes visiveis e contexto.

🏆 Melhor correspondencia
75%
Russia, Moscow

The most compelling evidence is the Cyrillic text "ТСП ЦО" visible on the black metal door. "ЦО" is a standard abbreviation for "Центральное Отопление" (Central Heating), and "ТСП" likely refers to a thermal substation point.

This, combined with the architectural style, strongly indicates a location in a former Soviet country. The interior—with its characteristic patterned floor tiles, two-tone painted walls (terracotta red and off-white textured plaster), and simple metal staircase railing—is archetypal of a common entryway/stairwell (known as a 'podyezd') in a Soviet-era panel apartment building ('panelka').

Russia is the largest and most populous country where this style is ubiquitous. The visual evidence is virtually identical to what would be found in Ukraine.

The country uses the Cyrillic alphabet, and its cities are filled with the same Soviet-era residential buildings featuring identical stairwells, floor tiles, and utility markings related to central heating. Without more specific linguistic clues, distinguishing it from Russia is difficult, but it remains a very strong candidate.

Belarus shares the same legacy of Soviet architecture and uses the Cyrillic script. The scene is perfectly consistent with the interior of an apartment block in Minsk or another Belarusian city.

The abbreviations for utilities like central heating are also similar. It is a plausible alternative to Russia and Ukraine, though statistically less likely based on population and size.

🌍 55.626512, 37.608535
2
Ukraine, Kyiv
70%

The visual evidence is virtually identical to what would be found in Ukraine. The country uses the Cyrillic alphabet, and its cities are filled with the same Soviet-era residential buildings featuring identical stairwells, floor tiles, and utility markings related to central heating. Without more specific linguistic clues, distinguishing it from Russia is difficult, but it remains a very strong candidate.

3
Belarus, Minsk
65%

Belarus shares the same legacy of Soviet architecture and uses the Cyrillic script. The scene is perfectly consistent with the interior of an apartment block in Minsk or another Belarusian city. The abbreviations for utilities like central heating are also similar. It is a plausible alternative to Russia and Ukraine, though statistically less likely based on population and size.

🗺 No mapa

Высокая уверенность высокая уверенность Средняя уверенность средняя Низкая уверенность низкая

Como a IA tomou a decisao

Ambiente

Urban • Not visible • Temperate to cold (inferred from need for central heating) • Temperate

Infraestrutura

Not visible • Cyrillic utility marking • Soviet-era residential block interior ('podyezd'). Patterned square floor tiles, textured plaster walls with a two-tone paint scheme, simple metal railing, concrete stairs with anti-slip grooves. • Interior of a Soviet-era apartment building, characterized by specific floor tiles, wall finishes, and railing design. • Typical Soviet-era residential building stairwell ('podyezd') with characteristic materials and design.

Texto visivel e placas

ТСП ЦО

Contexto e cultura

Not visible