Culture Since opening in April 2007, the 780-seat Grove Theatre has replaced the Queensway Hall as the town's premier arts centre. The Little Theatre, home of the Dunstable Rep Theatre Group, also hosts dramatic performances throughout the year. The auditorium, once part of the Chews Trust, was opened in 1964 by
Bernard Bresslaw. It stands next to the historic Chews House on High Street South. The town also has numerous amateur dramatics societies that perform several shows a year, including the Square Drama Circle and Dunstable Amateur Operatics Society. A
Wetherspoons called
The Gary Cooper (named after the
famous actor who attended the town's grammar school), and a nightclub called
BOX3 are located in the Grove Park complex. The complex is also home to Central Bedfordshire College, the Performing Arts Depot (PAD), and
BBC Three Counties Radio. The town receives its television signals from the
Sandy Heath TV transmitter. Local radio stations are
BBC Three Counties Radio on 103.8 FM,
Heart East on 97.6 FM and Luton and Dunstable Hospital Radio that broadcast from the
Luton & Dunstable Hospital in
Luton on 1134 AM.
Sport and leisure Several parks and open spaces are kept by Central Bedfordshire Council along with Dunstable Leisure Centre. The centre was closed on 4 June 2017 to undergo a £20.1 million redevelopment incorporating a new town library. The centre, re-opened in June 2019 and includes leisure facilities, a gym, swimming pools and a flexible community space for other public and community services, such as Citizens Advice and adult day care/disabled sports. Stevenage Leisure Limited will manage and operate the leisure centre on behalf on Central Bedfordshire Council. (also managed by SLL), a modern 32-lane
ten-pin bowling centre, and the main campus of
Central Bedfordshire College. The town is home to two football clubs,
Dunstable Town F.C. and
AFC Dunstable, who both play at the Creasey Park Stadium.
Dunstable Town F.C. play in the Spartan South Midlands Football League Premier Division and
AFC Dunstable play in the Southern League Division One Central.
Dunstable Town once famously recruited
George Best and subsequently defeated Manchester United 3–2 in the process.
Dunstablians rugby union club play their matches in nearby
Houghton Regis at Bidwell Hill. The club currently plays in the RFU Midlands division (level 6).
Lancot Meadow () is a small nature reserve managed by the
local Wildlife Trust. Alongside the Luton-Dunstable busway lies
Blow's Down, a site of special scientific interest.
Dunstable Downs Golf Club, founded in 1906 and designed by James Braid, is on the top of the Downs.
Landmarks Within the town centre is the Grove Theatre, Priory House Heritage Centre and the
Priory Church, where
Henry VIII formalised his divorce from
Catherine of Aragon. At the heart of the town sits the Quadrant Shopping Centre, while across High Street North a secondary shopping community, the Eleanor's Cross Shopping Precinct, hosts a modern statue commemorating the original
cross. Nearby Luton has the
Waulud's Bank prehistoric
henge and
Luton Museum and Art Gallery.
Dunstable Downs, a chalky escarpment outside the town, is a popular site for
kite flying,
paragliding and
hang gliding, while the
London Gliding Club provides a base for conventional
gliding and other air activities at the bottom of the Downs. Further into the countryside are the open-range
Whipsnade Zoo, a garden laid out in the form of a cathedral at
Whipsnade Tree Cathedral and the
Totternhoe Knolls motte-and-bailey castle. The
Icknield Way Path passes through the town on its 110-mile journey from
Ivinghoe Beacon in Buckinghamshire to
Knettishall Heath in Suffolk. The Icknield Way Trail, a multi-user route for walkers, horse riders and off-road cyclists also passes through the town. The route, now used for leisure, goes to the west and north of the main conurbation rather than following the road that still bears its name. ==Education==