AmeriCann is beginning construction on its Massachusetts Medical Cannabis Center in Freetown, which will manufacture and process marijuana products for the expanding Bay State medical and recreational market.

The 30,000-square-foot first phase, at an estimated cost of $6 million, is part of a larger project approved for nearly 1 million square feet of cultivation and processing space. The 52-acre Campanelli Drive parcel was previously owned by Boston Beer Co., which sold it to AmeriCann in 2016 for $4.5 million.

Since Massachusetts legalized medical cannabis in 2012, most of the cultivation facilities have been built in converted warehouses using artificial light. AmeriCann says its greenhouse-style facility is designed to cut utility bills and construction costs while encouraging the growth of higher-quality plants.

A groundbreaking ceremony was scheduled today for the first phase, which is expected to be completed in spring 2019.

The second phase would include a 350,000-square-foot building with space for two cultivators and central processing space, CEO Tim Keogh said. Pending local and state approvals, groundbreaking is scheduled for January.

AmeriCann would operate the 40,000-square-foot processing facility, capable of generating several hundred pounds of a day of products including flowers, infused beverages, lotions and extracts for vape pens, Keogh said.

Campanelli Construction is the general contractor and CBRE is the project manager for the MMCC.

Freetown Cannabis Center Begins $6M First Phase

by Steve Adams time to read: 1 min
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