To get any sort of significant steam power, you have to deal with constant, sealed high-pressure areas, requiring a decent understand of how gases/fluids work and very good manufacturing technique/materials.
Umm... no. You need steam, a pipe, and a wheel to make power from steam. I see no tech within a mile of that, nevermind hi-tech.
How much power do you expect to get out of that, exactly? Also, I mentally pictured that kind of set-up in my head and realized that you would actually completely fuck it over by doing that, because the steam would be exerting pressure both ways on the wheel: Clockwise on one sail (or whatever you want to call it) and counter-clockwise on the other one.
A lot of technology seems a hell of a lot easier than it actually is. This is one of those cases. If you don't actually know a lot about the subject involved, you aren't going to know what factors to take into account. This is how people come up with ideas for perpetual motion on a weekly basis.
Also, inside a pipe you're not going to get a sealed environment if there's a spinning wheel in there. Well, I guess you could if you contrive a sort of curvature that the vanes could follow, but that would require extremely precise engineering to actually be airtight.
Also: Pipes are "tech", and so are water-wheels. They don't grow out of the ground, and aren't perfect. You need metallurgical skill, manufacturing skill, knowledge of the principles of how those things actually work, and so forth. Something as simple as a wheel/axle is technology. You can't just wish really hard and have perfectly airtight, frictionless, accurately-built-within-1-nanometer pipe-and-wheel assembly.