It has been said that timing is everything.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, that timing seemed perfect for the Wankel rotary engine. Automakers across the globe were convinced Felix Wankel’s compact, high-revving rotary – with its triangular rotor spinning inside an epitrochoid housing – represented the next great leap beyond the conventional piston engine. It was smoother, smaller, and mechanically simpler, with far fewer moving parts than an equivalent reciprocating V-8. Fewer parts meant lower manufacturing cost, and that appealed directly to GM president Ed Cole, the same engineer who had shepherded Chevrolet’s small-block V-8 into existence two decades earlier. Convinced that the rotary could power everything from entry-level compacts to halo sports cars, Cole led GM to pay roughly $50 million in 1970 for broad production rights to the NSU ( which stands for “Neckarsulm”, the name of the town in Germany where the company was founded and located)/Wankel design, then launched an ambitious in-house “GMRCE” – General Motors Rotary Combustion Engine – program.
By the dawn of the 1970s, the plan inside the Tech Center was bold: GM’s RC-series two-rotor engine would go into small cars like the upcoming Vega/Monza family and, in suitably tuned form, into a new generation of performance machinery. The corporation’s engineers developed a compact two-rotor unit, most commonly documented as the RC2-206, displacing 206 cubic inches and rated at roughly 180 horsepower – a sizeable output for a naturally aspirated two-rotor from that era. The engine was meant to be GM’s future, not a sideshow. Cole openly talked about a time when every gasoline-powered GM vehicle would be rotary-driven. Against that backdrop, it was inevitable that someone would ask the question: “What about a rotary Corvette?”
Zora’s Rotary Assignment

When that question reached the Corvette side of the house, it landed on the desk of Zora Arkus-Duntov. By then, Zora had spent more than a decade pushing for a mid-engine Corvette and honing the car’s image in competition. The rotary, however, left him cold. In later interviews, he made it clear that he had never fallen in love with the Wankel engine the way Cole had. Still, Cole was not asking – he was directing. As recounted by Zora and later authors, GM’s president kept “twisting his arm” about a rotary Corvette, pressing him to explore what a Wankel-powered sports car might look like.

Zora was tasked with developing high-performance variants of GM’s rotary in one-, two-, three-, and four-rotor form and to investigate suitable platforms that could showcase both the technology and Chevrolet’s sporting intentions. Initially, he balked. The rotary’s poor fuel economy and emissions challenges were already apparent in testing, and its torque delivery and drivability were very different from the broad-shouldered small-block he knew so well. But the assignment forced him to think about packaging. A compact, relatively light power unit that could sit transversely over the rear axle opened doors that had long been closed by the length and mass of a conventional V-8. In that sense, the Wankel became a catalyst for something Zora had wanted all along: a mid-engine Corvette.
Conceiving the “Chevrolet GT”

Inside GM Styling, the rotary Corvette didn’t start life as a Corvette at all. The original brief was for a smaller, more European-scale mid-engine sports car that could slot beneath the full-size Corvette in price and stature – a kind of American analogue to a Porsche 914 or Opel GT. The internal project code was XP-987 GT. Over time, this car has famously been mis-reported in some sources as XP-897 GT, but period engineering documentation and later research confirm that XP-987 GT is the correct designation.

GM designer John“Kip” Wasenko, working under Vice President of Styling Bill Mitchell, was assigned to give this new “Chevrolet GT” its shape. From the outset, the concept was meant to be compact, lithe, and worldly. Mitchell wanted a car that could look at home on the streets of Turin or Frankfurt as easily as in Detroit – a dramatic departure from the long-hood, short-deck stance of the contemporary C3. The rotary’s modest size encouraged that shift. With no big V-8 sitting ahead of the driver, the nose could be low and wedge-like, the cabin pushed forward, and the rear deck shortened to just cover the transaxle and luggage space.
Building on a Porsche Backbone

There was a practical problem, however: GM didn’t have a ready-made mid-engine chassis lying around that matched the compact dimensions Mitchell and Wasenko envisioned. Rather than lose time developing one from scratch, Chevrolet quietly purchased a Porsche 914/6 – the six-cylinder version of Porsche’s entry-level mid-engine sports car – to serve as the structural foundation.
Engineers shortened the Porsche’s wheelbase by about 6.5 inches, trimming it down to roughly 90 inches, and then widened the front and rear tracks to help fill out the more muscular GM bodywork that Wasenko was sketching. The basic 914 suspension – MacPherson struts up front and trailing arms in the rear – remained in place, as did the four-wheel disc brakes, though mounting points and geometry were adjusted to accommodate the new stance. The result was a chassis with the proven mid-engine balance of the 914, but re-proportioned for a lower, wider, more aggressive grand-touring coupe.

On top of that Porsche-derived floorpan, GM engineers mounted a transverse powerpack – the two-rotor GM rotary coupled to a three-speed automatic transaxle that had originally been developed for front-wheel-drive applications. Turned around and placed ahead of the rear axle line, this compact engine-transmission unit made packaging the XP-987’s mid-engine layout surprisingly straightforward. It is worth noting that while some period documents list the engine as a 266-cubic-inch RC2-266, most later factory-linked sources describe the two-rotor unit used in the Vega/Monza program – and intended for XP-987 – as an RC2-206 of 206 cubic inches, rated at approximately 180 horsepower. That discrepancy highlights the rapid evolution of the GMRCE program (and the incompleteness of some surviving paperwork). Still, the broad picture is clear: this was a relatively high-output two-rotor that, in a very light car, promised performance comparable to that of a small-block V-8.
From Clay to “Space Buck”

While the engineering team massaged the Porsche chassis, GM Styling moved rapidly from sketches to full-size clay. By mid-1971, the Design Staff had created a full-scale fiberglass mock-up of the Chevrolet GT, followed by what they called a “first-class space buck” – an incredibly detailed physical layout model showing where every major component, from the fuel tank and cooling system to wiring looms and pedal box, would live in the finished car.

These were not just pretty showpieces. The space buck allowed engineers and stylists to sit in the car, check visibility, evaluate ergonomics, and verify that systems packaging made sense. It also provided GM executives with a tangible sense of how “real” the project had become. When the fiberglass mock-up and the space buck were presented to top brass in 1971, the reaction was strong enough that the directive came back to turn XP-987 from a static model into a fully running car. At that moment, the little rotary GT transitioned from an internal experiment into a serious contender for future production.
Sending a Corvette to Pininfarina

If timing is everything, then this was the moment when the XP-987 GT’s path crossed with Italy. Bill Mitchell, long enamored with European design houses and always keen to imbue GM concepts with a more international flavor, saw an opportunity. Rather than ask the already-stretched GM body engineering groups to tool and hand-build the car’s steel bodywork, he turned to one of the most storied coachbuilders in the world: Pininfarina of Turin.
In early 1972, the shortened Porsche chassis – now carrying a mock-up of the two-rotor powertrain – was crated up along with a full-size plaster model of the Chevrolet GT and shipped to Italy. A small supervisory team from GM Styling accompanied the car to ensure that Wasenko’s lines and Mitchell’s proportions were translated faithfully from clay to steel. Pininfarina, used to working at breakneck speed for manufacturers like Ferrari, Peugeot, and Alfa Romeo, took on the task of fabricating the car’s body panels and assembling the complete prototype. Over the course of roughly six months, the Turin shop built a steel bodyshell with aluminum doors, hood, and rear hatch – a blend aimed at balancing strength, weight, and tooling practicality.
A Compact Corvette in Ferrari Clothing

When the XP-987 GT returned from Italy, it did so first in an unpublicized silver finish with a silver interior – a quiet, almost understated color combination that emphasized the car’s surfaces rather than its presence. Internally, it was still known simply as the Chevrolet GT. But the shape that Pininfarina had hammered into existence was anything but anonymous. Shorter, narrower, and markedly lower than a C3 Corvette, the car was only about 166 inches long, 65-plus inches wide, and a mere 43.3 inches high. At roughly 2,600 pounds, it weighed several hundred pounds less than a contemporary production Corvette.
Visually, it looked like a cross-pollination between contemporary Ferraris and the sharper wedges that would define mid-1970s Italian design. The nose was low and clean, with a slim bumper and integrated rectangular turn signals. The most striking feature was the headlamp treatment: four square lamps recessed into pockets and covered by clear glazing – effectively exposed quad headlights at a time when U.S. regulations still forced most makers into pop-up units. The front and rear bumpers were formed from energy-absorbing polypropylene, part of GM’s broader work on 5-mph impact systems, and integrated neatly into the bodywork.

Along the flanks, the car wore flowing fender forms, subtly blistered over the wheels, with a pronounced beltline that kicked up gently into the rear quarter. The doors wrapped generously around the A-pillars, easing ingress and egress and giving the glasshouse a taut, cockpit-like feel. In the roof, Mitchell specified a split windshield with the radio antenna embedded along the center seam – one of his signature touches. Behind the B-pillars, shallow air intakes were carved into the rear quarters to feed cooling air into the engine bay. That air was then vented out through discreet outlets above the rear fascia, visually echoing the louvers and ducts that were becoming hallmarks of mid-engine exotics.
Under the large, fastback-style rear hatch, spectators could peer down onto the two-rotor engine and transaxle, separated from the passenger compartment by a glass bulkhead. It was an intentional piece of theater: this was a car that wanted you to see its unconventional heart beating behind the seats.

Inside, the cabin was tighter than a C3 but thoughtfully laid out. Fixed-back bucket seats were paired with an adjustable steering column and even adjustable pedals, allowing drivers of different sizes to find a workable position in what was, by any measure, a very compact interior. Luggage space behind the engine measured a modest 8.1 cubic feet – enough for weekend bags, but not much more.
The Rotary Heart of the XP-987 GT

For most of its early development, XP-987 ran with either a mock-up power unit or an experimental RC-series engine. By the time the car was ready for its public life, the rotary program had settled on a two-rotor layout for the Chevrolet GT/Corvette application. The engine displaced just over 200 cubic inches – again, most commonly documented as the RC2-206 – and was fed by a Rochester Quadrajet carburetor. It used side intake ports, peripheral exhaust ports, and a twin-plug ignition system to promote more complete combustion and smoother running at high rpm.
GM literature and contemporary reporting cite an output of about 180 horsepower at around 6,000–6,100 rpm – numbers in line with what Mazda was producing from its two-rotor engines at the time, but from a significantly larger displacement. In the featherweight XP-987 GT, that power, routed through the compact three-speed automatic and Porsche-based running gear, promised lively performance. Internal projections suggested the car could match or better the acceleration of a small-block C3, while offering a very different character: a smooth, free-revving surge rather than the big-torque lunge of a V-8.

On paper, the package made sense, but there were clouds on the horizon. Early testing of GM’s rotary showed that getting acceptable emissions out of the engine without strangling performance was far harder than originally advertised. Turning it into a fuel-efficient power plant was harder still. The same attributes that made the Wankel so smooth – its large combustion surface area and relatively short expansion stroke – also made it thirsty and dirty compared with even a mildly detuned piston engine.
From Chevrolet GT to Corvette Two-Rotor

Before the world ever saw XP-987, GM gave it a makeover. As the 1973 European auto-show season approached, corporate planners decided that the little mid-engine GT should no longer stand alone as a “Chevrolet” concept – it should carry the Corvette name. Shortly before its scheduled appearance in Germany, the silver paint and matching interior gave way to a dramatically richer Candy-style metallic red, a fawn (saddle) leather cabin, and a set of gold-anodized wheels with machined lips.
Those wheels are an interesting footnote in their own right. Designed by GM for the concept, their turbine-like pattern with a recessed center would later be released to Motor Wheel – a Goodyear-owned supplier – and sold in the aftermarket under the name “Vector,” becoming a minor icon of 1970s wheel design.
Less than a week before the car’s scheduled debut, GM’s leadership made one more change: the Chevrolet GT would appear on the stand as the “Corvette Two-Rotor.” There was no time to tool traditional script badges, so stylists produced decal-style nameplates for the flanks and rear, visually tying this compact exotic back to America’s sports car.

Most sources agree that the Corvette Two-Rotor’s first major public appearance came at the 45th German Motor Show in Frankfurt in September 1973, although some accounts emphasize the Paris Motor Show a month later; what’s clear is that the car quickly became a centerpiece of GM’s European car show circuit that fall. Under the intense lights of the exhibition halls, the low red hatchback and its gold wheels drew crowds. Here was a Corvette in name only – small, mid-engined, and unapologetically European in stance.
Rumors, naturally, exploded. The newly christened “Corvette Two-Rotor” arrived at Frankfurt sitting impossibly low and wide under the show lights—Candy Apple Red paint, gold wheels, saddle interior—and it drew a crowd almost instantly. Journalists and showgoers pressed against the stand railings, trying to peer past the glass to the twin-rotor powerplant and take in the unfamiliar proportions of a Corvette that looked more Turin than St. Louis. Many assumed they were seeing a full dress rehearsal for the next-generation Corvette; others whispered that Chevrolet was secretly cooking up a second, “junior” model that would slip beneath the C3 in price and size. Car and Driver later summed up the atmosphere around the program with a sly subhead: “Publicly, it’s a show/test car. Privately, it may be on the road in 1976.”

The European press, used to sneering at American bigness, suddenly found itself intrigued. Here was a GM product that borrowed the mid-engine layout and tidy footprint of cars like the Dino 246 GT and Porsche 911, wrapped in Pininfarina-shaped steel and powered by the same kind of exotic rotary that had made NSU’s Ro80 and Mazda’s Cosmo technical conversation pieces. Reports out of the show emphasized how quickly GM’s advanced studio had gone from idea to running car, and how seriously upper management seemed to be treating the project—granting it not just a splashy Frankfurt debut, but a full tour through the European show circuit. One retrospective would describe the reception at Frankfurt as “generally favorable,” noting that if the rotary gamble had paid off, this little red coupe might well have become the face of a very different Corvette era.
In a Europe still wary of American excess and reeling from the first tremors of the oil crisis, the notion of a GM-built, Pininfarina-bodied, two-rotor Corvette felt almost surreal. The car seemed to promise that Detroit could speak fluent European—sharp-edged engineering in a compact package, with just enough Chevrolet swagger baked in. Bench-racing arguments spilled from the show halls into cafés and editorial offices: Would this finally be the mid-engine Corvette? Was it a serious production candidate or just a rolling test bed for the Wankel? For a brief moment, as the crowds thinned each evening and the Two-Rotor’s red paint cooled under the hall lights, it was possible to believe that this experimental coupe from Chevrolet might rewrite not only Corvette history, but the way the world thought about American performance cars altogether.

Inside GM, the Corvette Two-Rotor generated serious discussion as well. There were tentative product-planning sketches that showed a late-1975 or 1976 introduction for a production derivative built on a unique GM platform, powered by the same two-rotor engine destined for the Monza and for AMC’s early Pacers. For a moment, the future of the Corvette family seemed to hinge on a compact rotary.
Zora, however, was not impressed. In Karl Ludvigsen’s research, Duntov famously dismissed the car as underpowered and, more damningly, impractical. He noted that interior and luggage space were so limited that “in case of rain you are forced to disrobe outside of the car and shove the raincoat in the trunk – there is no space to store the coat.” For a man who measured sports cars as much by their long-distance usability as their lap times, the Two-Rotor fell short.
Oil Shock, Emissions, and the Rotary’s Fall

Even if Zora had been its biggest fan, the Corvette Two-Rotor was about to run head-on into geopolitical reality. In October 1973, only weeks after the car’s European debut, the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC) announced an embargo on oil shipments to nations – including the United States – that supported Israel during the Yom Kippur War. Within months, American motorists were facing gasoline rationing, long lines at the pumps, and soaring prices.
Suddenly, fuel economy wasn’t just a talking point – it was a primary buying criterion. At the same time, U.S. federal emissions standards were tightening rapidly. GM engineers struggled to get the RC2-series rotary to meet those standards without crippling performance. The engine’s inherently high surface-to-volume ratio and combustion characteristics made controlling unburned hydrocarbons particularly difficult. To make matters worse, even in best-case calibration, the two-rotor struggled to match the fuel efficiency of GM’s detuned piston engines, which were themselves no paragons of economy.

By September 1974, the handwriting was on the wall. Ed Cole, the rotary’s chief advocate, had retired, and his successors were far less willing to stake GM’s future on a powerplant that was now politically and environmentally suspect. GM officially postponed, and then effectively cancelled, the production GMRCE program. Dealer order guides that had once listed the RC2-206 as an upcoming option for the 1975 Monza quietly dropped the reference, and AMC’s plans to buy GM rotaries for the early Pacer were shelved.
For the Corvette Two-Rotor, cancellation of the rotary program was a death sentence. Even though the XP-987 GT had proven that a compact two-rotor could move a light mid-engine coupe smartly, there was no way to justify a thirsty, emissions-troubled halo car in the immediate aftermath of the oil crisis. Whatever small chance this unique production derivative once possessed had evaporated.
Exile Under a Temporary Bond

Concept cars often meet ignominious ends, but the Corvette Two-Rotor’s post-show life was especially complicated thanks to international tax law. Because Pininfarina had built most of the car’s bodywork in Italy, GM had brought the completed prototype into the United States under a “temporary importation” bond that allowed the company to display and test the car without paying full import duty on the Italian value added. That bond, however, came with strings attached: the car could only remain in the U.S. for a limited period unless GM either paid the duty or re-exported it.
After its European show run, the XP-987 GT toured the United States, appearing at events that ranged from auto shows to the 1974 World’s Fair in Spokane, Washington. When its American itinerary ended, GM removed the RC2 engine and automatic transaxle – the power unit was reportedly returned to NSU Motorenwerke AG, or otherwise scrapped along with most of the experimental rotaries – and crated the car for shipment back across the Atlantic.
The body and chassis, still wearing their Candy red paint and gold wheels but now without a drivetrain, were sent to GM’s British subsidiary, Vauxhall, and stored at the company’s Design Centre in Luton, Bedfordshire. The logic was simple: by re-exporting the car to Europe, GM avoided paying additional U.S. duty on a prototype program that had already cost millions. Once there, the XP-987 GT was effectively forgotten. For the better part of a decade, it sat sealed in a crate or tucked into a corner of the styling complex – a small, rotary-shaped dead end in GM’s mid-engine story.
Tom Falconer’s Rescue Mission

The Corvette Two-Rotor might well have ended its life as scrap if not for a fortunate chain of friendships. In the early 1980s, Vauxhall’s Luton facilities were being remodeled, and long-stored items – including the XP-987 GT – had to be moved or disposed of. The plan, as is so often the case with obsolete concept cars, was to crush the car. Geoff Lawson, then head of styling at Bedford Trucks (part of GM’s British operations), was given responsibility for carrying out the order.
Lawson, however, happened to be a Corvette enthusiast. Before sending what he knew was a unique mid-engine coupe to the crusher, he called his friend Tom Falconer, proprietor of Claremont Corvette in Kent and author of numerous Corvette books. Falconer initially thought Lawson was offering him a compressed “cube” of the car as a piece of showroom sculpture – a macabre but not unheard-of fate for famous prototypes. Realizing from the description that the vehicle in question was the long-lost Two-Rotor, he balked. He didn’t want the cube; he wanted the whole car.

Lawson didn’t have the authority to overrule GM’s decision, but he urged Tom Falconer to go straight to the top and call GM’s head of Styling, Chuck Jordan—someone Falconer had gotten to know while researching a book on the Cadillac Seville. A meeting was arranged at the GM Tech Center in Detroit to discuss the fate of the orphaned prototype. Behind closed doors, Jordan laid out why the two-rotor Corvette had been condemned: to the corporation, it was a lingering embarrassment, a costly Wankel detour, and an ideological dead end. As far as he was concerned, no Corvette would ever wear a steel body or carry its engine amidships.
Even so, Falconer’s persistence made an impression. Against the odds, GM agreed to sell him the XP-987 GT, provided it left corporate custody without its experimental powertrain. Instead of being sent to the shredders, the car—still missing its heart—was shipped to Falconer, preserving a unique chapter of Corvette history that GM was otherwise ready to erase.

Getting the car running again required improvisation. Initially, Tom Falconer installed a Vauxhall Cavalier four-cylinder engine and automatic transmission — enough to make the car mobile and prevent it from being a static, crated relic. But as Falconer continued to work on the car, he made a bolder choice: he replaced that temporary drivetrain with a more fitting powerplant — a Mazda 13B two-rotor engine, mated to a front-wheel-drive Cadillac automatic transaxle turned and mounted to approximate the mid-engine, rear-drive layout that the original designers at General Motors had envisioned for the concept.
By the year 2000, after a careful cosmetic restoration that refreshed its original red paint and cleaned up the marks of long-term storage, Falconer reintroduced the reborn prototype to the public at a gathering of the National Corvette Restorers Society in the United States. The appearance stunned Corvette enthusiasts, many of whom had only known the car from grainy black-and-white photographs and half-remembered magazine features. What had been an obscure “what-if” prototype decades earlier was suddenly real, rolling under its own power and radiating the sharp, compact presence it had once carried on the auto-show circuit.

Falconer did not stop there. Over the years that followed, he continued refining the restoration, chasing countless small details while quietly nurturing a much larger ambition: someday reuniting the prototype with its originally intended power source, a true GM Rotary Combustion Engine. Most of those experimental rotary engines had been destroyed when the program was cancelled, but Falconer persisted, following leads, talking to former GM engineers and insiders, and tracking the scattered remnants of the rotary project. After considerable persistence and detective work, he finally managed to locate one of the very few surviving GMRCE units.
That effort paid off in early 2019, when the prototype — by then widely known among enthusiasts as the “2-Rotor Corvette” — was invited to the Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance. There, the XP-897 GT was displayed alongside the freshly acquired GM rotary engine, giving the public its first true glimpse of what the car might have been: a compact, mid-engine Corvette powered not by a traditional small-block V8, but by the smooth, unconventional pulse of a two-rotor Wankel. For the first time since the early 1970s, the styling, chassis concept, and intended powerplant were reunited in one place.
Home at the National Corvette Museum

For decades, the XP-987 GT lived in England under Falconer’s care, occasionally venturing out for shows and media features. Meanwhile, in the United States, the Corvette community’s fascination with mid-engine history grew as rumors – and eventually prototypes – of a production mid-engine Corvette evolved into the C8. By the time Chevrolet unveiled the 2020 mid-engine Stingray, the story of how Zora and others had pushed for that layout over 60 years had become central to Corvette’s official narrative.
In 2020, the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Kentucky, brought the story full circle. Thanks to fundraising efforts led by the Lone Star Corvette Club and the Texas Corvette Association, the museum acquired the XP-987 GT from Tom Falconer and repatriated the car to the United States. Initially, the Two-Rotor Corvette served as a centerpiece of the special exhibit “The Vision Realized: 60 Years of Mid-Engine Corvette Design,” where it was displayed alongside other key mid-engine studies and engineering testbeds throughout 2020 and 2021. Sadly, the opportunity for spectators to experience the exhibit and see the XP-987 GT in person was dampened by the outbreak of the Coronavirus Pandemic in March 2020.

Fortunately, even as the museum’s exhibits evolved, the XP-987 GT remained a key attraction at the National Corvette Museum. The car moved to a new “home” at the NCM within the iconic Skydome as part of the current (at the time of publication) “An American Love Affair: 70 Years of Corvette”display. There, it shares space with landmark machines like Zora Arkus-Duntov’s personal 1974 Corvette and a host of historically significant production and concept cars, all set against a dynamic “Skywall” video installation that traces the Corvette’s cultural and technological impact.
In that setting, visitors can walk around the low red coupe, peer through its glass rear hatch at the compact mid-engine layout, and appreciate just how different GM’s vision for a rotary-powered sports car really was. Just as importantly, they can follow the improbable journey that carried the car from Detroit to Turin, across the European show circuit, into exile in England, through a near-death encounter with a crusher, and finally onto the polished floor of the museum that now celebrates it. For anyone standing beneath the Skydome, the XP-987 GT is no longer a footnote or a rumor from a grainy photograph; it is a tangible reminder of how close Corvette once came to taking a radically different path.
Legacy of a Rotary Dead End

On one level, the XP-987 GT / Corvette Two-Rotor is an evolutionary dead end – a car built around an engine architecture that GM abandoned before it ever reached showrooms. Its compact dimensions, modest luggage space, and reliance on a thirsty rotary make it difficult to imagine as a volume production Corvette in the post-OPEC world. Zora’s criticisms of its packaging and practicality were not wrong, and in the 1970s, the corporation had larger fires to fight than launching a niche mid-engine halo car that would have struggled to pass emissions and satisfy fuel-conscious buyers.
Yet to dismiss the Two-Rotor as a mere curiosity is to miss its broader significance. The XP-987 GT proves that GM’s design and engineering teams were willing to question almost every assumption about what a Corvette could be: its engine layout, its size, its styling language, even its country of coachbuild. It shows Bill Mitchell and Kip Wasenko experimenting with Pininfarina in ways that foreshadowed collaborations between American brands and European design. It reveals how far Ed Cole was willing to go in pursuit of rotary technology – far enough to build a mid-engine Corvette on a Porsche chassis and ship it halfway around the world.

Most importantly, the car occupies a key chapter in the long narrative that culminates in the production C8. Along with the XP-882, the Four-Rotor “Aerovette,” and the CERV research vehicles, the Two-Rotor helped normalize the idea of a mid-engine Corvette inside GM and in the minds of enthusiasts. When you stand next to the XP-987 GT today, looking at its compact proportions and glass-covered engine bay, it’s hard not to see echoes of it in the modern Stingray’s silhouette. The rotary may have vanished from GM’s future, but the mid-engine dream it helped bring into focus eventually became reality.
In that sense, the XP-987 GT is more than a historical footnote. It is a tangible reminder that even failed experiments can push a marque forward, and that sometimes the path to a landmark production car runs through a forgotten crate in a British design center – and through the hands of people stubborn enough to believe that an obsolete rotary prototype is worth saving.
Why the XP-987 GT Still Matters Today

The XP-987 GT still matters because it captures Corvette at one of its most intellectually restless moments. This was not Chevrolet polishing a proven formula or refining a familiar shape. It was Corvette leadership exploring an entirely different future—smaller, lighter, more internationally flavored, and powered by an engine GM believed could help redefine the modern automobile. Even without reaching production, that willingness to break from convention matters. It tells us that Corvette’s history was never as linear as it may appear in hindsight.
What makes the car especially important is how many competing ambitions it carries in a single package. The XP-987 GT is a Corvette experiment, a rotary experiment, a styling experiment, and a packaging experiment all at once. It reflects a period when General Motors was still large and confident enough to chase multiple futures simultaneously, even when those futures pulled in different directions. That gives the car unusual value today. It is not simply a prototype with an interesting shape. It is evidence of a corporation testing the outer edge of its own imagination.
It also matters because it exposes an alternate branch of Corvette development that feels surprisingly relevant in a modern context. Long before today’s sports cars became global objects shaped by international engineering influences, the XP-987 GT was already pointing in that direction. Its Pininfarina connection, Porsche-based underpinnings, and unconventional powertrain made it something far more cosmopolitan than the traditional image of a front-engine American V-8 sports car. In that respect, it reminds us that Corvette’s evolution was never confined to Bowling Green, St. Louis, or Detroit thinking alone. Some of its boldest ideas were born when Chevrolet looked outward.
There is another reason the XP-987 GT deserves attention: it helps us better understand failure as part of Corvette’s development process. Not every important car succeeds in the showroom. Some matter because they sharpen the questions that future cars must answer. The Two-Rotor forced GM to reckon with packaging, emissions, performance identity, fuel economy, and public expectations all at the same time. It may not have delivered the final solution, but it helped define the problem more clearly—and that, in engineering terms, is often just as important.
Today, the XP-987 GT stands as proof that Corvette’s eventual transformation into a mid-engine production sports car did not happen overnight, nor did it emerge from a single flash of inspiration. It was built through decades of trial, disagreement, ambition, and revision. The Two-Rotor belongs to that story in a very real way. It represents a moment when Chevrolet was willing to risk being wrong in order to discover what might be possible. And for a nameplate that has survived by evolving without losing its identity, that may be one of the most Corvette qualities of all.

