By Evan Allen for the Boston Globe
In Franklin, Rina Cametti envisions a warm and welcoming wash of earth tones in a medical marijuana dispensary less clinical than homey, filled with couches and lots of natural wood.
In Brockton, John Greene’s dream dispensary — painted in subtle blues and greens, the atrium walls decorated with succulents — would be a healing space where patients could pick up their medical marijuana and get free acupuncture, nutrition counseling, and massages.
And in Brookline, Kevin Fisher hopes to set up an inviting and contemporary dispensary on Beacon Street, with window sheers and translucent lighting that would allow the building, currently a liquor store, to blend into the streetscape.
They are three of the 100 finalists, announced on Nov. 22, vying for licenses to open medical marijuana dispensaries in Massachusetts. The state’s Department of Public Health will award up to 35 licenses, with at least one and a maximum of five per county, and is aiming to have final decisions made by the end of next month.
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