Priestly Demolition featured on second season of History Channel show

History Channel show featuring Canada-based demo firm starts airing its second season on April 19.

priestly demolition salvage
Ontario-based Priestly Demolition and its quest to find items to salvage will be featured in season two of History Channel’s “Salvage Kings” program.
Photo courtesy of the History Channel.

The History Channel broadcast schedule in Canada will again feature King, Ontario-based Priestly Demolition Inc. crew members for season two of the “Salvage Kings” program.

According to the History Channel website, season two of “Salvage Kings” will start the evening of Monday, April 19, and will feature “another season of thrilling demolitions and extraordinary finds by the team at Priestly Demolition.”

Adds the New York-based History Channel, “Leading the charge is Head of Salvage Ted Finch and his crew – modern-day treasure hunters who stop at nothing to uncover rare and valuable objects from buildings that are on the verge of demolition. They are pushed to their limits as they scour through demanding demolition sites to ensure no hidden gems are left behind and lost forever.”

Season two also will feature company president Ryan Priestly, who according to the History Channel, “devises an expansion plan for the salvage team that will transform [its] operation.”

The cable television station says Finch and his crew in season two will approach their work “with humor and passion as they crisscross through amazing locations to rescue treasured items from destruction. Every object tells a story, and there’s no telling what the Salvage Kings will find, nor where their incredible discoveries will end up.”

On its website, Priestly Demolition describes itself as a versatile and innovative demolition company that “approach[es] all projects with a strong concept of how to maximize remediation and salvage potential to minimize our impact on the environment, and [to] work with communities to create unique solutions to minimize the impact demolition projects have on their neighborhoods.”