At first glance it looks more like a horse-drawn carriage than a car, but the 19th-century styling of the first Porsche ever built is hiding a vehicle that was technologically ahead of its time.
Official known as the "Egger-Lohner electric vehicle, C.2 Phaeton model", this four-seater was built by hand by Ferdinand Porsche himself in 1898, and according to Porsche it's been untouched since it was "parked in a warehouse in 1902".
Also known as the P1 (the code that was engraved on each part, standing for "Porsche #1"), the 1350kg vehicle was battery powered with a range of up to 80km or three to six operating hours.
With an average output of 3 horsepower (boosted to 5 in "overloading mode") the P1 could reach speeds of up to 35km/h and was one of the first vehicles ever registered in Porsche's native Austria.