REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
- MedMen, a company that operates a chain of marijuana dispensaries, is opening a flagship store on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue.
- The store will be for medical marijuana customers at first, but a representative for MedMen says that "momentum is on their side."
- It'll be open for business on April 20.
The marijuana industry is about to make a huge mark on New York City.
MedMen, a cannabis retail company that operates a chain of slick, high-end marijuana dispensaries, is opening a new flagship store on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue later this month, Daniel Yi, a senior vice president at MedMen, told Business Insider.
"We're really excited about it," Yi said. "We want the store to show our vision of the future for cannabis."
The 2,000 square foot store, located just a couple blocks away from Saks Fifth Avenue and Barney's, is set to open on April 20th - something of a holiday for marijuana consumers.
Unlike MedMen's medical dispensaries in California and Nevada, where marijuana is legal for adults to purchase, New York only allows the sale of medical marijuana to license holders. There are only around 33,000 registered medical marijuana patients in New York, out of a population of almost 20 million, according to Marijuana Business Daily.
The store will sell only what's allowed under New York's restrictive laws, meaning it will offer three main product lines to licensed medical marijuana users: Tinctures, gel caps, and vaporizer pens, Yi said.
Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
Though you need to have a license to actually purchase marijuana products at the store, anybody can come in and check it out, Yi said.
"That's a huge thing for us, in terms of educating the general population and trying to take the stigma out," Yi said.
MedMen operates three other medical marijuana dispensaries in New York state, which the company hopes to turn into more "retail-oriented" stores if New York's legislature legalizes cannabis for adult consumption.
This could signal that the marijuana industry, largely centered in West Coast cities where marijuana is legal, like Los Angeles, Denver, and San Francisco, is starting to set its sights on the highly-populated East Coast as more state markets open up.
It's a sign of the "momentum" of the cannabis industry, Yi said. Sixty-four percent of US voters support legalizing marijuana, according to recent polls.
REUTERS/Nir Elias
Eaze, one of the largest marijuana delivery services in California, is having "serious conversations" about entering the market in Massachusetts and is looking closely at legislation in New Jersey, though California remains the company's top priority, David Mack, a senior vice president at the company, told Business Insider.
There are also a number of investment firms set up to capitalize on the burgeoning cannabis industry based in New York City, like hedge fund Navy Capital and Tuatara Capital, a private equity fund. Leaflink, an online marketplace for dispensaries, is also located in New York.
"We're positioning ourselves for what we will believe is going to happen in New York," Yi said.
He might be right that there is even more East Coast momentum to come. Cynthia Nixon, the former actress mounting a primary challenge for governor against incumbent Gov. Andrew Cuomo, supports marijuana legalization. Neighboring Massachusetts has also legalized marijuana - with the industry set to open for business by this summer - and New Jersey is weighing similar legislation.
MedMen's stores are higher-end dispensaries, with carefully curated shopping experiences and trained "budtenders" walking customers through the experience of purchasing marijuana. The company recently raised a $41 million funding round, bringing its total valuation to over $1 billion.
And now, it's bringing that upscale marijuana shopping experience to a strip of Manhattan more well-known for designer handbags and diamond jewelry.
"We're going to be right on Fifth Avenue, I mean how cool is that?" Yi said.
Check out more of our cannabis industry coverage:
- The rising stars of marijuana's investment scene that everyone from Wall Street to Silicon Valley should know
- The highest-valued marijuana companies of 2017 reveal 2 key insights about the booming industry
- A startup that runs marijuana dispensaries is America's first $1 billion marijuana 'unicorn'
- A hedge fund that focuses solely on marijuana is crushing it
- A New York hedge fund manager moved to Canada and started the first marijuana company to be listed on a major US stock exchange - here's how he did it