May 16, 2011 (2011-05-16) – June 11, 2013 (2013-06-11)
Off Limits is an American realitytelevision series that premiered on May 16, 2011, on the Travel Channel. The series features "untold stories and secrets" of America's most iconic cities as host Don Wildman ventures and sometimes trespasses through unexplored areas where not many people have dared to go before. First season episodes aired every Monday at 9 PM EST.
The second season premiered on Tuesday April 17, 2012 at 10 PM EST. For the remainder of the season, one episode aired on a Thursday at 8 PM EST while the last few episodes were burned off on Sundays at 9 AM EST.
The third season premiered on Tuesday June 4, 2013 at 10 PM EST.
Synopsis
Adventure seeker and series host Don Wildman travels across America ignoring the warning signs to explore dangerous "off-limit" areas in major cities throughout the United States – cities that may just be a tourist destination for ordinary travelers, but for Wildman and his crew of urban spelunkers, are like embarking on a journey to rediscover a city's past by uncovering its secret history.
In the introduction, Wildman states:
In every city, every town are places sealed off from the rest of the world hiding their amazing stories behind locked doors inside barbwire where they say you cannot go. I'm Don Wildman, and these are the places I live to explore. The ones they tell you are... Off Limits.
Season 2 introduction, Wildman says:
Warning: Going off limits can be hazardous to your health. Whether it's flying the Goodyear Blimp or pulling an all-nighter in New York. It's accelerated; it's excavated...it's Off Limits.
Episodes
Season 1 (2011)
No.
Title
Original air date
1
"Los Angeles"
May 16, 2011 (2011-05-16)
In the season premiere, Don Wildman travels to the "City of Angels", his hometown, where he goes kayaking in the L.A. River, ventures inside the hidden L.A. aqueducts, infiltrates a former Nazi military camp high in the valley, climbs one of many active clandestine oil rigs next to a neighborhood, and navigates the miles-long stretch of "lost canals" in Venice Beach.
2
"Seattle"
May 23, 2011 (2011-05-23)
Wildman reveals the "Emerald City" from the Space Needle, rides the rails of the Electron Project in a rail car where the tracks are right above a 10-mile water plume, tries to find the remains of the USS Burton, a Mosquito Fleetsteamboat that sunk in the Gig Harbor near Puget Sound, goes underneath the 520 floating bridge, explores a remote tunnel pass in the Cascade Mountains where an avalanche occurred, and climbs to the top of a massive Douglas fir in the Seattle rain forest to cut it down.
During his trip to Tucson, Wildman discovers how pioneers created cities in the desert to create populated cities and uncovers a secret missile silo called Site 17 from the 1960s with Titan IInuclear weapons so powerful it could have started World War III. He learns the legend of the old Dutchman Mine in Goldfield where thousands of miners flocked to find the richest ore in the world and goes panning for gold at the Old Wasp Mine. Then he wanders around the massive compound of "The Boneyard", a final stop for retired U.S. war planes at Davis Monthan AFB, where they are restored by AMARG for museums. Don also explores the Theodore Roosevelt Dam that runs on hydro-electric power which helped Phoenix grow as a bustling city, and the Biosphere 2, an experimental self-contained Martianspace colony in the Sonoran Desert.
5
"Tennessee"
June 20, 2011 (2011-06-20)
While in "The Volunteer State", rough waters of the Nolichucky River cause Wildman to get thrown overboard while traveling down a Class IV river on a rafting trip to find the ruins of "Lost Cove", a hidden moonshining town deep in the Appalachian Mountains. Then it's off to the Great Smoky Mountains to make "White Lightning" moonshine by grinding corn at the Valentine Mill and bottling the hooch at the Ole Smoky Distillery in Knoxville. Next, Don learns about the local legend of Underground Chattanooga when citizens took it upon themselves to re-build their town 10 feet above water level after a flood wiped the town out in 1867. Also Don explores the drift mine of McNabb and a limestone cave system at the Mt. Raccoonreservoir and power plant in eastern Tennessee.
6
"Buffalo"
June 27, 2011 (2011-06-27)
Don travels to frigid Buffalo, New York in the middle of winter to investigate the abandoned and haunted Buffalo Central Station and visits a five-story health castle-like resort that detoxified its guests with shock treatments. He also discovers an old tunnel system from the early 19th century, gets access to a 100-year-old powerhouse run by the direct current transformers of Nikola Tesla, and explores concrete grain elevators that line the Buffalo River.
7
"Secrets of New York Islands"
October 4, 2011 (2011-10-04)
Don follows the endless waterways to find out how the islands of New York made the greatest city in the world possible. He gets access to Castle Williams on Governor's Island, an isolated stronghold from the 19th century that once saved New York City, uncovers the ruins of Bannerman's Castle on Pollepel Island, the fantasy island arsenal of the biggest arms dealer on earth, canoes through a tugboat and ferry graveyard in Staten Island, and investigates Long Island's Gold Coast mansions, Land's End and on the verge of ruin, Myron C. Taylor House, and scrambles around the forgotten remains of the Renwick Smallpox Hospital (once nicknamed "Dead House") on Roosevelt Island, an island once used to keep the less desirables out of the city.
8
"Dirty Secrets of Boston"
October 11, 2011 (2011-10-11)
Don goes underground in Boston for a look at America's first subway, "The T" that broke ground in 1895, where workers discovered a mass grave with 900 skeletons that included British soldiers from the Battle of Bunker Hill. Then he takes to "The Interceptor", a 130-year-old tunnel in a sewage super highway, Main Sewage Works, built under the city in Dorchester that was one of the first centralized sewers in the country. Don also checks out the second-largest waste treatment plant in the U.S., an innovative structure on Deer Island that helped clean up the once-filthy Boston Harbor, and climbs one of the plant's high-tech windmills that provides power to the city. Lastly, he investigates Fort Strong on Long Island, a concrete fort built in the 1890s that was a part of a coastal defense system to protect the city from warships.
9
"Transforming The Big Apple"
October 18, 2011 (2011-10-18)
Don returns to New York City and uncovers the Big Apple's hidden secrets. First, he goes inside the Washington Arch in Washington Square Park, then he explores the Sawmill River, the 20-mile river that runs beneath the streets of Yonkers that is under restoration for the town's riverwalk project. Next, it's off to Brooklyn to go canoeing in the filthy Gowanus Canal and under the Brower's Mill Bridge which was used in Washington's retreat from the British during the Battle of Brooklyn. Don also checks out the labyrinth beneath Plymouth Church, a place once called the "central grand depot of the Underground Railroad" run by Henry Ward Beecher in Brooklyn Heights. Then he investigates Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery, one of the most exclusive cemeteries in the country. Lastly, he goes to Coney Island Creek to climb aboard a homemade submarine named Quester built by steelworker Jerry Bianco to find sunken treasure on the Andrea Doria.
10
"Hawaii"
October 25, 2011 (2011-10-25)
Don travels to Hawaii to visit Coco Palms Resort on Coconut Coast in Kauai, a once-popular resort for the rich and famous now ravaged by Hurricane Iniki in 1992. Then it is across the island to Koloa to explore the rusty remains of Hawaii's first sugar plantation from 1836, and rides ATVs up the mountains to Huleia River to find the water source of the Waita Reservoir, the largest man-made reservoir in the state. He then checks out the Tersuo Harano Tunnel, a hi-tech tunnel system bored into a dormant volcano at the base of the Ko'olau Mountains to make way for the "H-3", a huge highway that comes out of Honolulu which took 37 years to build. He also uncovers secret bunkers from World War II and an abandoned hospital on Ford Island, discovers a cave sewer system under the town of Waikiki Beach, and learns about ancient Hawaiian blood rituals.[1]
11
"St. Louis"
November 1, 2011 (2011-11-01)
Don visits St. Louis to explore the city's rapid change through the years and gets up close and personal with the mighty Mississippi River when he transverses the Eads Bridge, a steel train bridge over the river. He sees how St. Louis became the brewing capital of the U.S. when he visits the historic Lemp Brewery complex in Benton Park and goes into the honeycomb caves used to store the lager beer below. Then he explores the Ashley Street Power Station that was constructed in 1902 for the 1904 World's Fair and to provide electricity to the city. Also, Don checks out the decapitated Cotton Belt Freight Depot which delivered cotton to the city by a greedy robber baron. Lastly, he climbs atop the first dome made of cast and raw iron in America inside the old court house.[2]
12
"Pittsburgh"
November 10, 2011 (2011-11-10)
Wildman visits Pittsburgh, the steel-making capital of the world that built modern America, to reveal how this dirty industry town turned itself into a hi-tech 21st century metropolis. First, Don gets special access to the abandoned Carrie Blast Furnace, the last remaining building that was once a part of the 50,000-acre steel-making complex. Next, he travels on the Three Rivers of the Allegheny, the Monongahela, and the Ohio River and one of its many dam systems, called the Braddock Locks. Then he investigates the mythical tunnels of the Allegheny Arsenal, the once vital 30-acre stockpile that was possibly hiding a top-secret subterranean supply line for the Union Army. It also became the setting of the bloodiest civilian tragedy in the Civil War from "The Laboratory" (a munitions plant) gunpowder explosion that claimed 78 victims on September 17, 1862, the same day as the Battle of Antietam. Don then explores the mighty dome of the Civic Arena aka "The Igloo", the first retractable-roof arena in the world before its demolition date. Lastly, he scales the lowest level of the Fort Pitt Bridge, a part of the city's Golden Triangle, and checks out a robotics institute, Smith Hall of Carnegie Mellon University.[3]
13
"Twin Cities"
November 20, 2011 (2011-11-20)
Don explores the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul, Minnesota, revealing the secret past of these sibling cities and their hidden underworlds. First, he checks out the giant wreck of the 1880 Gold Medal Flour facility on the west bank of the Mississippi River in Minneapolis and subterranean remains its rival the Pillsbury's Best Flour mill built a year later on the east bank of the river in Saint Paul. Next he explores the gangster hangouts of Saint Paul (including the Lowry Hotel, and the Minnesota Club), and the Landmark Center, a former federal Building and post office that was an outpost of Federal agents called "G-Men" that put a stop to organized crime in the Roaring Twenties there. He then gets special access to the massive vaults that kept the First National Bank secure from bank robbers, and explores the huge silos of the old Schmidt's Brewery castle that was the first to abandon the natural cave system to embrace new technology to make beer. Don then goes inside the waterfall of St. Anthony Falls, an infrastructure that rebuilt the dam in Minneapolis. Lastly, he visits the innovative Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, home of the Minnesota Vikings, that was under construction after a blizzard ripped through its 27-year-old roof.[4]
Season 2 (2012)
No.
Title
Original air date
14
"Making Gold, Escaping Alcatraz & Tunneling Under Grand Central[5]"
"Atop the World's Largest Domed Stadium, Entertaining with Water, Fire and Ice & Crushing Concrete Roadways"
June 11, 2012 (2012-06-11)
Wildman blasts through the streets of Ohio, climbs up the roof of the $1.1 billion, 3 million square foot Dallas Cowboys Stadium to check out the view of Arlington, Texas, learns how to shread discharded tires at a BAS tire recycling plant in Moreno Valley, California, discovers the process of how extravagant water displays are made on the campus of WET (Water, Entertainment, Technology) in Los Angeles, California, then gets a behind-the-scenes look at their creations in action in Las Vegas; first the water fountain show at the Bellagio, then the colorful ice fountain at CityCenter and then the volcanic fire show at The Mirage, sees what goes into designing a survival shelter in the Great Salt Lake in Utah, and helps with "PK crushing" concrete in Akron, Ohio.
22
"Launching a Rocket, Demolishing a Pier and Firing Rounds"