A visitors' centre, opened on 19 April 1971 by the
Duke of Devonshire, attracted around 120,000 visitors per year. It covered the history of Jodrell Bank and had a planetarium and 3D theatre hosting simulated trips to
Mars.
Asbestos in the visitors' centre buildings led to its demolition in 2003 leaving a remnant of its far end. A
marquee was set up in its grounds while a new science centre was planned. The plans were shelved when
Victoria University of Manchester and
UMIST merged to become the
University of Manchester in 2004, leaving the interim centre, which received around 70,000 visitors a year. In October 2010, work on a new visitor centre started and the Jodrell Bank Discovery Centre opened on 11 April 2011. It includes an entrance building, the Planet Pavilion, a Space Pavilion for exhibitions and events, a glass-walled cafe with a view of the Lovell Telescope and an outdoor dining area, an education space, and landscaped gardens including the Galaxy Maze. A large
orrery was installed in 2013. The facility also includes a history of Jodrell Bank exhibition, and a space dome showing various space themed shows. The visitor centre is open Tuesday to Sunday and Mondays during school and bank holidays and organises public outreach events, including public lectures, star parties, and "ask an astronomer" sessions. A path around the Lovell telescope is approximately 20 m from the telescope's outer railway, information boards explain how the telescope works and the research that is done with it. The
arboretum, created in 1972, houses the UK's national collections of
crab apple Malus and
mountain ash Sorbus species, and the Heather Society's
Calluna collection. The arboretum also has a small
scale model of the
Solar System, the scale is approximately 1:5,000,000,000. At Jodrell Bank, as part of the
SpacedOut project, is the Sun in a 1:15,000,000 scale model of the Solar System covering Britain. On 7 July 2010, it was announced that the observatory was being considered for the 2011 United Kingdom Tentative List for
World Heritage Site status. It was announced on 22 March 2011 that it was on the UK government's shortlist. In January 2018, it became the UK's candidate for World Heritage status. In July 2011 the visitor centre and observatory hosted "Live from Jodrell Bank - Transmission 001" – a rock concert with bands including
The Flaming Lips,
British Sea Power,
Wave Machines,
OK GO and
Alice Gold. On 23 July 2012, Elbow performed live at the observatory and filmed a documentary of the event and the facility which was released as a live CD/DVD of the concert. On 6 July 2013, Transmission 4 featured Australian Pink Floyd, Hawkwind, The Time & Space Machine and The Lucid Dream. On 7 July 2013, Transmission 5 featured New Order, Johnny Marr, The Whip, Public Service Broadcasting, Jake Evans and Hot Vestry. On 30 August 2013, Transmission 6 featured
Sigur Rós,
Poliça and
Daughter. On 31 August 2013, Jodrell Bank hosted a concert performed by the
Hallé Orchestra to commemorate what would have been Lovell's 100th birthday. As well as a number of operatic performances during the day, the evening Halle performance saw numbers such as themes from
Star Trek,
Star Wars and
Doctor Who among others. The main Lovell telescope was rotated to face the onlooking crowd and used as a huge projection screen showing various animated planetary effects. During the interval the 'screen' was used to show a history of Lovell's work and Jodrell Bank. There is an astronomy
podcast from the observatory, named
The Jodcast. The
BBC television programme
Stargazing Live was hosted in the control room of the observatory from 2011 to 2016. Since 2016, the observatory hosted
Bluedot, a music and science festival, featuring musical acts such as
Public Service Broadcasting,
The Chemical Brothers, as well as talks by scientists and scientific communicators such as
Jim Al-Khalili and
Richard Dawkins. == Threat of closure ==