Richard Hammond-s Workshop - Season 1 Portable
The twist? Richard Hammond knows how to drive fast cars. He has absolutely no idea how to fix them.
Fans of Hammond expecting high-octane stunts will be surprised. is actually a brilliant study in vulnerability .
The series, which aired on Discovery+ in the UK and MotorTrend in the US, represents a significant pivot in Hammond’s television career. It strips away the pyrotechnics and scripted banter of his previous work to reveal something far more raw: the terrifying reality of starting a small business in your late fifties. Richard Hammond-s Workshop - Season 1
However, in 2021, Hammond took a sharp turn away from global adventures and into a much more terrifying arena: . The result was Richard Hammond’s Workshop , a six-part reality/documentary series aired on Discovery+ (and later Quest). Season 1 is not just about polishing chrome; it’s a gritty, emotional, and surprisingly stressful look at what happens when a petrolhead tries to turn a passion project into a viable business.
Unlike Jeremy Clarkson’s Farm (which is about the chaos of nature), Hammond’s Workshop is about the chaos of finance . The show succeeds because Hammond is unafraid to look foolish. He admits he doesn't understand a carburetor. He apologizes when he orders the wrong paint. He stresses over payroll. The twist
While the drama is human, the steel is spectacular. Season 1 avoids the usual million-dollar Ferrari restorations. Instead, Hammond focuses on the "cog" mentality—British classics that matter.
"I used to drive into walls for a living," Hammond says in the finale. "Now I’m trying to build something that lasts. Terrifying, isn’t it?" Fans of Hammond expecting high-octane stunts will be
The show is produced by and premiered on Discovery+ . While it retains Hammond’s signature self-deprecating humor, the tone is more "docu-series" than "entertainment show." It highlights the meticulous, often slow-moving craft of metalwork, painting, and mechanical engineering. Season Summary