Bud bar and more. First cannabis shop in Orleans to open in October

ORLEANS — The owners of Seaside Cannabis Company, a soon-to-open cannabis dispensary, have been working hard on branding, marketing and construction plans that are turning a former insurance company into a destination dispensary.

Seaside will be the first cannabis dispensary in Orleans.

It's taken seven years of effort.

The business is in a two-story, 8,455-square-foot building at 14 Lots Hollow Road. Two apartments occupy the second floor, and plans are in the works to add a third floor and another market-rate apartment, according to building owner A.J. Luke.

Seaside Cannabis Company business partners intend to open in October at 14 Lots Hollow Road in Orleans. David Currier, A.J. Luke, Tim McNamara, Adam Higgins and Spencer Knowles are working to open the cannabis shop.
Seaside Cannabis Company business partners intend to open in October at 14 Lots Hollow Road in Orleans. David Currier, A.J. Luke, Tim McNamara, Adam Higgins and Spencer Knowles are working to open the cannabis shop.

Luke is one of four local partners in the venture. The others are David Currier, Adam Higgins, and Tim McNamara. Spencer Knowles is working towards becoming a managing partner.

They plan to open in October.

Out of the 15 towns on Cape Cod, seven prohibit the sale of cannabis. In total, 17 medical and recreational dispensaries are on the Cape and Islands, according to the Cannabis Control Commission.

Massachusetts reported more than $4 billion in adult-use sales and nearly $1 billion in medical sales since 2018, according to the Cannabis Control Commission. But wholesale flower prices have dropped about 50% from 2022, the Commission reported.

A secure entry and 45 parking spaces

Knowles said the store has been designed with customer ease and comfort in mind. Entry is in the back where 45 parking spaces are located. A secured entryway is where IDs will be checked to make sure customers are old enough to buy cannabis.

Flow, engagement and education are important, Knowles said. And the store is set up like a restaurant with a “front” and “back” of the house. The front is for customers, who will not be able to touch any of the products until their IDs have been checked and products purchased. The “back” of the house will contain three vaults, rooms for employees and a receiving area.

Jenna Scalese shows on Wednesday her work on a door for the "bud bar" at Seaside Cannabis Company in Orleans. The business partners intend to open in October at 14 Lots Hollow Road.
Jenna Scalese shows on Wednesday her work on a door for the "bud bar" at Seaside Cannabis Company in Orleans. The business partners intend to open in October at 14 Lots Hollow Road.

A production room in the basement for manufactured marijuana products

Plans for a phase two include building a production room in the basement with stainless steel tables. Employees will be able to make manufactured cannabis product. But phase two is dependent on approval of a product manufacturing license. Another vault is located next to it where manufactured product would be kept.

A long "bud bar" where flowers are sold is the first main section of the store. Shelves behind a bar top made of flaming red box elder will hold containers of different strains of buds. Employees can take products out of the containers to give customers a closer look at what the buds look and smell like. Customers will be able to buy a few grams of product at a time.