Locations for the provisionally granted medical marijuana dispensary licenses are:
Medical Marijuana of Massachusetts, Inc.; 95 Echo Road, Mashpee
William Noyes Webster Foundation, Inc.; 226 Great Western Road, South Dennis
Medical Marijuana of Massachusetts, Inc.; 400 Revolutionary Drive Taunton (industrial park)
Brighton Health Advocates Inc. d/b/a Compassionate Care; 132 Alden Road, Fairhaven
Alternative Therapies Group, Inc.; 50 Grove Street, Salem
Healthy Pharms, Inc.; 114 Hale Street, Haverhill
Debilitating Medical Condition Treatment Centers, Inc.; 181 Appleton Street, Holyoke
New England Treatment Access, Inc.; 296 Nonotuck Street, Northampton
Patriot Care Corp.; 70 Industrial Avenue, Lowell
Central Ave Compassionate Care, Inc.; 31 Central Avenue, Ayer
Garden Remedies, Inc.; 697 Washington Street, Newtonville (Newton)
The Greeneway Wellness Foundation, Inc.; 11 First Street, Cambridge
New England Treatment Access, Inc.; 1416-18-20 Beacon Street, Brookline (outside Coolidge Corner, at Summit Street trolley stop)
Ermont; 216 Ricciuti Drive, Quincy (Quarry Hills development)
Medical Marijuana of Massachusetts, Inc. 9 Collins Avenue, Plymouth (inside industrial park at Routes 3 and 44)
In Good Health, Inc.; 1200 West Chestnut Street, Brockton (southwest of Route 24/123 interchange)
Good Chemistry of Massachusetts, Inc.; 364-368 Boylston Street, Boston (between Arlington and Berkeley)
Green Heart Holistic Health & Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; 70 Southampton Street, Boston (at Mass. Ave. close to BCH and county house of correction)
Bay State Relief, Inc.; 13 Commercial Way, Milford
Good Chemistry of Massachusetts Inc.; 9 Harrison Street, Worcester (between Harding and Green Streets)
Tedeschi convenience store to open at former Kelly's Roast Beef spot in Allston
. . . Valeri said an existing Tedeschi shop a couple doors down at 1219 Commonwealth Ave. will close when the new store opens.
. . . He said those prior deals fell through and interest in the space was tough to generate likely due to several reasons, including that Kelly’s asking sublease price was high and that the location does not have a drive thru or its own parking.
Does Bottega Veneta still have the store out at the mall in Natick? If so, will they still keep it?Globe is reporting that Bottega Veneta is going to open a store in Heritage on the Garden, and Hermes is tripling the size of its space.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/business...ding-boston/7C0hFq0PQXc77g393RCkkL/story.html
I think it was put on hold(Boston lingo for smothered with a pillow) during the recession. Their plans for the Mandarin called for an 'epicenter' store, which was probably a bit ambitious at least at the time. Prada is another brand that Boston should have and could support but on a smaller scale than what was talked about then.
I would imagine they'll keep the store in Natick, they're catering to two distinct clienteles.
It bothers me somewhat that we haven't heard anything on the Chanel space. I passed through the Taj Sunday for a drink and the bartender I talked to, who was not as up on what's happening as the Ritz bartenders were, didn't know anything.
Hermes does an amazing business. The store's never crowded but when someone walks in and buys up fifteen neckties at $200 a pop or three pairs of shoes totaling $3500, the sales per square foot rack up very quickly.
There's still a lot of downmarket stuff on Newbury that could easily give way to luxury brands, I would love to see brands like Gap and H & M relocate off Newbury to Huntington down by Symphony Hall and along with a Uniqlo and/or a Century 21 form a more middle of the road retail district aimed at students and the less affluent population.
I think it's only a matter of time before all of those brands(Prada, Dolce & Gabbana and Christian Louboutin) arrive in Boston. What is needed are some quality men's brands like Kiton as I've mentioned, Brioni, Paul Stuart and Turnbull & Asser to name a few which I think would succeed here.
I realize most people here are probably adamantly anti-smoking but am I the only one terribly disappointed that Boston is down to one cigar bar?
I would imagine they'll keep the store in Natick, they're catering to two distinct clienteles.
It bothers me somewhat that we haven't heard anything on the Chanel space. I passed through the Taj Sunday for a drink and the bartender I talked to, who was not as up on what's happening as the Ritz bartenders were, didn't know anything.
Hermes does an amazing business. The store's never crowded but when someone walks in and buys up fifteen neckties at $200 a pop or three pairs of shoes totaling $3500, the sales per square foot rack up very quickly.
There's still a lot of downmarket stuff on Newbury that could easily give way to luxury brands, I would love to see brands like Gap and H & M relocate off Newbury to Huntington down by Symphony Hall and along with a Uniqlo and/or a Century 21 form a more middle of the road retail district aimed at students and the less affluent population.
I think it's only a matter of time before all of those brands(Prada, Dolce & Gabbana and Christian Louboutin) arrive in Boston. What is needed are some quality men's brands like Kiton as I've mentioned, Brioni, Paul Stuart and Turnbull & Asser to name a few which I think would succeed here.
I realize most people here are probably adamantly anti-smoking but am I the only one terribly disappointed that Boston is down to one cigar bar?
While we're on the subject of Newbury Street does anyone know what's going in the space where L'Aroma Cafe used to be? The one next to Georgetown Cupcakes. The only clue is a teaser sign on the window. Something about a locally renowned cafe.
It's going to become a Thinking Cup cafe.
http://bostonrestaurants.blogspot.com/2013/11/laroma-cafe-in-bostons-back-bay-has.html