Maserati in camouflage: a sedan with a Ferrari engine was left in the capital (3 photos)
In a Kyiv courtyard, a fifth-generation Maserati Quattroporte Sport GT stands in the open air — once a luxurious Italian sedan with the heart of a Ferrari, but now abandoned with flat tires, a layer of dirt, and no license plates.
The khaki-colored car involuntarily hints: either someone from the Trade Center decided to "show class," but the financial plan didn't work out, or the owner simply fled abroad, leaving his whim to chance.
The irony is that today a Maserati Quattroporte can be bought for the price of a Renault Logan, and sometimes even cheaper. There is only one nuance - maintenance. One "minor" breakdown can cost half of a new Chinese crossover.
And here comes the classic of the genre: "it would be better to give it to the Armed Forces". But imagine a situation when a Maserati with a Ferrari engine is brought to the front line. Yes, it would look impressive - but each trip could cost half the brigade's budget. And even the most persistent mechanic after the first MOT would ask to return to the good old pickup.
So this Maserati in the yard is not so much about "luxury" as about contrast: almost anyone can buy an Italian status symbol, but living with it in peace and harmony is the fate of the chosen ones. The rest leave them outside, in the sun and rain, so that passersby can see how quickly a dream can turn into a monument to illusions.









