Barbary Coast cannabis lounge

The Barbary Coast Collective lounge on Mission Street in San Francisco, California is the first Amsterdam-style coffee shop allowing on-premises cannabis consumption for any adult in California since January 2018. It is perhaps the first in the United States. Its interior "resembles a steakhouse or upscale sports tavern with its red leather seats, deep booths with high dividers, and hardwood floors".[1] Its owners include David Ho, described as a "political power player in Chinatown".[2] In opening another Barbary Coast Collective establishment, the first dispensary in the Sunset District, Ho had to negotiate with fellow Chinese-American citizens of the district who were opposed to cannabis businesses and cannabis advertising.[3][2]

The lounge features quartz glass appliances for dabbing cannabis concentrates and a "combustibles" smoking area for other products.[4]

High Times listed Barbary Coast as one of San Francisco's top 10 dispensaries and said its "old-school" ambiance was "what happens when cigar bars are actually cool".[5] It employed about 20 people in 2017.[6] Los Angeles Times called it "probably the best known" lounge in San Francisco, the city which "set the standard" in the United States.[7]

See also

References

  1. Paul Elias (March 15, 2018), San Francisco Embraces Amsterdam-Style Marijuana Lounges, The Associated Press via US News
  2. Michael Barba (December 5, 2017), "SF approves first ever medical cannabis dispensary in the Sunset", San Francisco Examiner
  3. Rachel Swan (November 28, 2017), "Power broker's involvement in S.F. pot club hits resistance", San Francisco Examiner
  4. Tony Bravo (March 17, 2017), "The most decadent pot smoking lounge in the West", San Francisco Chronicle
  5. Jay Mack, "The 10 Best Marijuana Dispensaries in San Francisco", High Times
  6. Melia Robinson (June 24, 2017), "What it's like to work as a 'budtender' in the legal marijuana industry", Business Insider via Yahoo! Sports
  7. Michael Smolens (March 17, 2019). "San Diego considers cannabis lounges. San Francisco set the standard". Los Angeles Times.

Further reading

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