Medical cannabis operator readies Manchester facility, eyes five dispensary sites in region

gLeaf Cultivation

The first onsite harvest is expected in September. (Photos courtesy of Green Leaf)

As it prepares to open the Richmond area’s first medical cannabis production facility this month, its operator now has its eye on opening several dispensaries, thanks to recently signed state legislation.

Green Leaf Medical plans to open its 82,000-square-foot production and dispensary facility at 2804 Decatur St. later this month, pending a final inspection. The first onsite harvest is expected in September and resulting oil-based products will be on shelves in October.

The company, which also operates in Ohio and Pennsylvania, plans to open up to two distribution centers in the Richmond area, and as many as three elsewhere within the state-defined regional health service area by November after the passage of state legislation in April that cleared the way to expansion. The newly created law allows the state’s Board of Pharmacy to dole out as many as five additional permits for cannabis-dispensing facilities to each of the current five licensees around the state.

GL facility

Green Leaf’s production and distribution center in Manchester is expected to begin operations this month.

While the site search is ongoing and no property has been secured yet, the new Richmond-area dispensaries could end up in Short Pump or Shockoe Bottom, said Green Leaf CEO Phil Goldberg.

Green Leaf was one of five companies awarded a license by the state in 2018 to initially construct one medical cannabis facility in each of the commonwealth’s five health districts. Green Leaf won the right for the Richmond region. It promptly built the $20 million facility and then sold the facility to San Diego-based Innovative Industrial Properties for $11.8 million. IIP, a publicly traded REIT, buys and then leases back medical cannabis facilities. Green Leaf continues to lease the facility and retained the state license.

Green Leaf will use the same script for its upcoming dispensaries. The new facilities won’t produce medical marijuana products, but will distribute what the Manchester facility produces to customers who are registered with the state.

Goldberg has his fingers crossed for former bank branches with drive-thrus, because they’re a good fit for dispensaries.

The company expects to pay an estimated $3 million to line up land and build or renovate as necessary to have more dispensaries running by this fall.

The facilities slated for outside the Richmond area will be scattered throughout the health service area Green Leaf is cleared to operate in, which consists of 27 localities in the south-central part of the state, including Richmond, Henrico, Chesterfield, Hanover and Petersburg.

More facilities means the company can introduce home delivery, something that is already legal but had been unfeasible in Virginia prior to the more recent legislation, Goldberg said.

“In Maryland, we run one of the largest home delivery operations on the East Coast. We know that in order to operate a cannabis home delivery model effectively you need delivery hubs. Additional retail access points and a realistic home delivery model are big wins for Virginia medical cannabis patients,” Goldberg said.

The Manchester facility is projected to produce about 2,000 pounds of plants a month. That facility will employ about 100 people. Upcoming dispensaries are expected to employ 20 to 25 people.

gLeaf Cultivation

The first onsite harvest is expected in September. (Photos courtesy of Green Leaf)

As it prepares to open the Richmond area’s first medical cannabis production facility this month, its operator now has its eye on opening several dispensaries, thanks to recently signed state legislation.

Green Leaf Medical plans to open its 82,000-square-foot production and dispensary facility at 2804 Decatur St. later this month, pending a final inspection. The first onsite harvest is expected in September and resulting oil-based products will be on shelves in October.

The company, which also operates in Ohio and Pennsylvania, plans to open up to two distribution centers in the Richmond area, and as many as three elsewhere within the state-defined regional health service area by November after the passage of state legislation in April that cleared the way to expansion. The newly created law allows the state’s Board of Pharmacy to dole out as many as five additional permits for cannabis-dispensing facilities to each of the current five licensees around the state.

GL facility

Green Leaf’s production and distribution center in Manchester is expected to begin operations this month.

While the site search is ongoing and no property has been secured yet, the new Richmond-area dispensaries could end up in Short Pump or Shockoe Bottom, said Green Leaf CEO Phil Goldberg.

Green Leaf was one of five companies awarded a license by the state in 2018 to initially construct one medical cannabis facility in each of the commonwealth’s five health districts. Green Leaf won the right for the Richmond region. It promptly built the $20 million facility and then sold the facility to San Diego-based Innovative Industrial Properties for $11.8 million. IIP, a publicly traded REIT, buys and then leases back medical cannabis facilities. Green Leaf continues to lease the facility and retained the state license.

Green Leaf will use the same script for its upcoming dispensaries. The new facilities won’t produce medical marijuana products, but will distribute what the Manchester facility produces to customers who are registered with the state.

Goldberg has his fingers crossed for former bank branches with drive-thrus, because they’re a good fit for dispensaries.

The company expects to pay an estimated $3 million to line up land and build or renovate as necessary to have more dispensaries running by this fall.

The facilities slated for outside the Richmond area will be scattered throughout the health service area Green Leaf is cleared to operate in, which consists of 27 localities in the south-central part of the state, including Richmond, Henrico, Chesterfield, Hanover and Petersburg.

More facilities means the company can introduce home delivery, something that is already legal but had been unfeasible in Virginia prior to the more recent legislation, Goldberg said.

“In Maryland, we run one of the largest home delivery operations on the East Coast. We know that in order to operate a cannabis home delivery model effectively you need delivery hubs. Additional retail access points and a realistic home delivery model are big wins for Virginia medical cannabis patients,” Goldberg said.

The Manchester facility is projected to produce about 2,000 pounds of plants a month. That facility will employ about 100 people. Upcoming dispensaries are expected to employ 20 to 25 people.

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Ed Christina
Ed Christina
3 years ago

Question for real estate people:
“It promptly built the $20 million facility and then sold the facility to San Diego-based Innovative Industrial Properties for $11.8 million. IIP, a publicly traded REIT, buys and then leases back medical cannabis facilities. ”
1-They spent 20 M to build itand sold it for 11.8? Why?
2-Why build something, turn around, sell it, then lease it back?
Is there a tax reason for this?

Matt Faris
Matt Faris
3 years ago
Reply to  Ed Christina

Not sure but there is a license reason. They had one. Others did not. I’d guess that was part of their strategy all along. Make it back in retail sales.

Joe Aaron
Joe Aaron
3 years ago
Reply to  Ed Christina

Ed, this a common transaction known as a sales-leaseback. Green Leaf benefits by removing $11.8 million of debt from the property, and the REIT benefits by obtaining a low risk ROI on the property. I think the lease payments are deductible for Green Leaf, which is another bonus.

Ed Christina
Ed Christina
3 years ago
Reply to  Joe Aaron

Joe Aaron;

Thanks for a clear answer, I owe you lunch when this is over.

Patricia Wcislo
Patricia Wcislo
3 years ago

We have a lot of banks with drive thru and a Pharmancy that just closed with two drive thrus! Please contact Tazewell Virginia and see what happens, we need a shop here in Tazewell Va 24651