Rob Bell (TV presenter)


Rob Bell is a British TV presenter, adventurer, engineer and STEMnet ambassador. He has appeared on TV programmes on BBC, Channel 5, Travel Channel and Yesterday.

Early life

Rob Bell spent most of his childhood in the United States and France. He achieved a Master's degree in Mechanical Engineering with French at the University of Bath, completing his dissertation at a University in Lyon, France. He had previously worked for French radio station Connexion FM and the Energy Saving Trust before he started in television.

Television career

His first television work was the BBC series Engineering Giants which he co-hosted with engineer turned comedian Tom Wrigglesworth in 2012. In 2013 he presented the Travel Channel programme Rob Bell's Engineering Enigmas and its series Man Vs World, where he participated in several adventure sports in different locations around the world. This was followed up in 2014 by BBC programme The Secrets of D-Day, and another Travel Channel programme Secrets and Mysteries London and the Channel 5 six part series Underground Britain.
In 2015 Bell presented the BBC history programme Haslar: Secrets of a War Hospital, and then completed seven marathons on seven continents for the Travel Channel series Monster Marathon Challenge.
In 2016 Bell presented the BBC documentary Tank Men to commemorate 100 years since the first use of tanks, and narrated the BBC series Sea Cities. He also presented the Channel 5 series Britain's Greatest Bridges. He also appeared as a contributor to Yesterday series Abandoned Engineering, which was later adapted to the 2017 US series Mysteries of the Abandoned on the Science Channel.
During 2017 he presented further Channel 5 programmes Inside the Tube - Going Underground; Great British Royal Ships; The World's Greatest Bridges co-presented The Great Fire and Brunel:The Man who Built Britain. He also presented BBC show Invented in The South.
In 2018 Bell presented further programmes for Channel 5 with The Flying Scotsman airing in February, World's Tallest Skyscrapers in June and Walking Britain's Lost Railways in September. A second series of Walking Britain's Lost Railways premiered in 2020.