Let's Get the Feel for the Wheel of a Ford at the New York World's Fair's Ford Pavilion!
The Aurora never went into mass production, but it is a cool (and odd) prototype! Just look at all that chrome. From this angle it looks like a sports car, but it was in fact a sort of station wagon. Here's a description that I found on the 'net:
It only had three doors - two on one side and one on the other (and a back hatch). Continuing the "three" theme, it was divided internally into three compartments - the front had two buckets, and the middle/back each had a kind of wrap-around sofa feature, with a glass partition between the second and third seats. Crazy!

Here are some other angles, stolen by me from somewhere (I've forgotten unfortunately). That is one cool station wagon!

Also on display at some point inside the pavilion were a number of humorous scenes showing how automobiles had become such an integral part of American culture through the years.

There were also historic Ford vehicles on display, such as this Quadricycle. As you can see, this one was, "...built by Henry Ford's hands in 1896. It's a pretty elegant little car!

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By special request, here is the other interior from the Carousel of Progress. It is very dark as you can see, and any further adjustments resulted in a grainy mess. Still, you can see Father loafing in his chair while Mother slaves away at a hot iron in one of the side tableaus. You can just see the robin outside the window, supposedly also used in "Mary Poppins".