Autoworld has a replica of the Eolipyle in its permanent collection.
Eolipyle, the first automobile invention built in 1672 by the Belgian Jesuit Father Ferdinand Verbiest.

Then attached to the Imperial Court in Peking, Father Verbiest presented the Chinese Emperor with a small self-propelled vehicle to demonstrate the useful use of steam. Although he published an article in the journal Astronomia Europea in 1687, no plans or drawings of the small vehicle have ever been found.

The Audi Konfuzius Institute at the Technischen Hochschule in Ingolstadt set itself the challenge of scientifically proving that the vehicle was indeed capable of running on steam. Professor Dr Suchandt and his team of mechanical engineering students went through Father Verbiest's technical data to build their replica. The result matches the original, with the exception of the steam boiler, which had to be adapted for safety reasons.