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Drone Rules for Palácio do Grão-Pará
Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro (rj)
• Brazil
Palácio do Grão-Pará - Centro, Petrópolis - RJ, 25610-020, Brazil
Lat: -22.5078 • Lng: -43.1739
Rules Edit History: Palácio do Grão-Pará
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May 28, 2026 1:27 AM
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- https://publicacoes.decea.mil.br/publicacao/ICA-100-40 — In accordance with DECEA instruction ICA 100-40, municipal historical conservation codes, and private estate protection frameworks, the entire Palácio do Grão-Pará compound is designated as a permanent, zero-tolerance no-fly zone for civilian unmanned aircraft.
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| Field | Before | After |
|---|---|---|
| Rule category | Ground | Air |
| Flight status | Unknown | NoFly |
| Summary | — | The airspace over and surrounding the Palácio do Grão-Pará (Petrópolis, RJ) is classified as a strictly restricted Private Royal Estate, Cultural Heritage, and Urban Environmental Protection Zone. Civilian drone flights are completely banned over the palace grounds, its private sovereign residential quarters. |
| Mapped shapes | — | 7a934651-6d44-4a67-bef7-6c53fd4be115 |
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The Palácio do Grão-Pará, located in the historic center of Petrópolis, is a landmark building of immense historical significance. It is uniquely recognized as the only official palace in Brazil still owned and actively used as a private residence by direct descendants of the Brazilian Imperial Family (the House of Orléans-Braganza). Designed in the neoclassical style during the 19th century, it sits within a heavily secured, walled estate featuring pristine imperial gardens and historical dependencies.
Operating an unauthorized civilian drone near this private palace compound is strictly illegal and will trigger an immediate security response due to critical risk factors:
Strict Privacy & Security Protection: Because the palace functions as a private, high-profile sovereign residence rather than a public museum, the estate is protected under strict residential security and privacy codes. A zero-tolerance airspace bubble is maintained over the walls to prevent unauthorized paparazzi mapping, illegal filming of private quarters, or airborne harassment targeting the residents and their guests.
Complex Mountainous Microclimate: Geographically, Petrópolis is situated in a high-altitude mountain region characterized by sudden, unpredictable wind shears, thick fog, and narrow valleys. A drone losing control due to structural turbulence or signal loss risks crashing into the palace's centuries-old roofs, causing irreversible damage to a protected national heritage asset, or colliding with the dense network of overhead electrical cables in the surrounding streets.
Low-Altitude Emergency Routes: The mountain region of Rio de Janeiro relies heavily on low-altitude helicopter transits for environmental monitoring, fire fighting, and medical emergencies. Uncoordinated drones in this tight mountain valley pose an immediate mid-air collision hazard.
The entire perimeter is actively monitored by private security details, municipal cameras, and local law enforcement. Any civilian drone attempting to cross the palace walls or operate over the gardens without an exceptional, pre-approved tactical authorization from DECEA (via SARPAS NG) and explicit written consent from the estate administration will be intercepted. The equipment will be seized, and the operator will face immediate detention by the Military Police (Polícia Militar), leading to severe administrative fines and potential criminal prosecution under DECEA instruction ICA 100-40 and national heritage protection laws.
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+ The Palácio do Grão-Pará, located in the historic center of Petrópolis, is a landmark building of immense historical significance. It is uniquely recognized as the only official palace in Brazil still owned and actively used as a private residence by direct descendants of the Brazilian Imperial Family (the House of Orléans-Braganza). Designed in the neoclassical style during the 19th century, it sits within a heavily secured, walled estate featuring pristine imperial gardens and historical dependencies. + + Operating an unauthorized civilian drone near this private palace compound is strictly illegal and will trigger an immediate security response due to critical risk factors: + + Strict Privacy & Security Protection: Because the palace functions as a private, high-profile sovereign residence rather than a public museum, the estate is protected under strict residential security and privacy codes. A zero-tolerance airspace bubble is maintained over the walls to prevent unauthorized paparazzi mapping, illegal filming of private quarters, or airborne harassment targeting the residents and their guests. + + Complex Mountainous Microclimate: Geographically, Petrópolis is situated in a high-altitude mountain region characterized by sudden, unpredictable wind shears, thick fog, and narrow valleys. A drone losing control due to structural turbulence or signal loss risks crashing into the palace's centuries-old roofs, causing irreversible damage to a protected national heritage asset, or colliding with the dense network of overhead electrical cables in the surrounding streets. + + Low-Altitude Emergency Routes: The mountain region of Rio de Janeiro relies heavily on low-altitude helicopter transits for environmental monitoring, fire fighting, and medical emergencies. Uncoordinated drones in this tight mountain valley pose an immediate mid-air collision hazard. + + The entire perimeter is actively monitored by private security details, municipal cameras, and local law enforcement. Any civilian drone attempting to cross the palace walls or operate over the gardens without an exceptional, pre-approved tactical authorization from DECEA (via SARPAS NG) and explicit written consent from the estate administration will be intercepted. The equipment will be seized, and the operator will face immediate detention by the Military Police (Polícia Militar), leading to severe administrative fines and potential criminal prosecution under DECEA instruction ICA 100-40 and national heritage protection laws.