3) Porsche T7 - The original 911

The 1959 T7, also known as 754 in Stuttgart-speak, was one of the original prototypes of the 911 (or at the time, the 901). Penned by F.A. ‘Butzi’ Porsche, its front-end styling was largely carried forward into production. However, Butzi’s father Ferry was unconvinced by the styling from the A-pillar backwards, preferring the fastback roofline of the Porsche 356 Coupé. Butzi literally went back to the drawing board, and created the classic Porsche 911 we all know and (mostly) love. It was this same period of gestation that saw the 911 gain its trademark boxer-six, in place of the T7’s 1.9-litre four-pot.


4)Porsche 984 'Junior'

Also given a four-cylinder in prototype form before being blessed with a boxer-six in production trim was the 984, otherwise known as the ‘Junior’. Developed in the mid-80s, it was a precursor to the first-generation Porsche Boxster and was also a mid-engined roadster. Unlike its eventual production successor, though, it had a novel folding hardtop roof, which flipped back and away in the same manner as a Ferrari 575 Superamerica. Only one 984 was built, and it currently resides in the Porsche Museum along with the Panamericana and the T7.
5)Porsche Tapiro by Italdesign

Spain’s Porsche importer wasn’t the only notable figure unimpressed with the styling of the 914/6. Giorgetto Giugiaro, who had recently founded Italdesign, was another – and for the 1970 Turin Motor Show, he presented his vision of a modern, mid-engined Porsche. The Tapiro used a 914/6 platform but was otherwise outwardly unrecognisable, and was named as such due to its resemblance to the pig-like tapir mammal; both shared a long, pointy nose and a high tail. Though never destined for production, it would influence countless other designs (particularly Giugiaro’s own): the Maserati Boomerang, Maserati Bora and Delorean DMC-12 all had obvious traces of the wedgy Porsche, while the butterfly engine covers were realised in production form on the De Tomaso Mangusta.

