Engineering Disasters goes beyond the headlines to uncover what really happened in the most notorious engineering accidents.
S1 E1: Exploding Manhole Covers
A modern jetliner crashes with 228 people on board. An oil refinery erupts in Utah, sending shockwaves through town and damaging over 100 homes. Manhole covers explode around the country, killing people and destroying property.
S1 E2: Heartland Explosion
Throughout history the same builders and engineers that paved man's path out of the caves also caused some of mankind's worst disasters. Often a huge calamity is traced back to a tiny cause, insignificant in itself, but triggering a domino effect.
S1 E3: Freight Train Collision
A single train crossing was the site of not one, but two disastrous auto collisions in a single year. How could this happen?
Investigate the site of a disastrous train crossing, a stage collapse at the Indiana State Fair, a deadly NYC explosion, a disastrous accident aboard an airliner at 36,000 feet, and a radioactive leak in Japan.
S1 E4: Kentucky Sinkhole
There's a gaping sinkhole at the National Corvette Museum - can a team of engineers fix it? And, what caused the collapse of Minneapolis Metrodome's iconic roof?
S1 E5: Colorado Dam Disaster
Nine dams in Colorado are taken out by a storm, flooding entire towns and leaving thousands stranded. Toxic vapours throughout a small NJ community after a train is derailed.
S1 E6: California Pipeline Catastrophe
An explosion in a San Bruno, California destroys homes and kills residents. An experienced captain and crew sail their ship into the path of Hurricane Sandy, leaving many asking why. Was it an engineering failure or human error?
S1 E7: Trapped Under Seattle
Why did Asiana flight 214, packed with passengers, suddenly crash land and cartwheel across San Francisco International Airport's runway? Three families of the dead want answers.
S1 E8: Raging Rocket
A mudslide that swallows an entire neighbourhood and leaves scientists baffled is investigated. Plus, could engineering be to blame for the deaths of more than 200,000 people in Haiti?