Manawatu Standard

‘Cannabis HQ’ in the pipeline

- Oliver Lewis

Cookie Time founder Michael Mayell has ambitious plans to make Christchur­ch the most cannabis literate city in New Zealand.

The entreprene­ur turned environmen­tal activist has partnered with Abe Gray, the founder of New Zealand’s first cannabis museum, to create a cannabis institute in two heritage-listed buildings in Manchester St. Called Whakamana, the New Zealand Institute of Cannabis Education, Research and Developmen­t, plans for the complex include an expanded version of the museum Gray created in Dunedin, a hemp food cafe and restaurant, hemp emporium and an alcohol-free plant shot bar.

‘‘We’re going to take two of Christchur­ch’s most iconic and oldest buildings and turn them into cannabis HQ NZ,’’ Mayell said. ‘‘We are here to help Kiwis become the most cannabis-literate people on the planet.’’

A company set up by Mayell and Gray has entered into an agreement with the Christchur­ch Heritage Trust to lease the nearly 160-year-old Shand’s building, which the trust painstakin­gly restored beside Trinity Congregati­onal Church.

The pair plan to use both buildings for Whakamana; Trinity will be used for the museum during the day, an education space Mayell dubbed ‘‘cannabis university’’ in the evenings, and for the alcohol-free plant shot bar at night.

However, first they need to raise at least $1 million. Mayell and Gray plan to use Shand’s, the oldest commercial wooden building in the city, as a base for a crowdfundi­ng campaign they expect to launch about October. Gray was optimistic that goal could be achieved. There was a need for education about the plant ahead of the 2020 referendum, and at least 250,000 regular cannabis users in New Zealand who might contribute, he said.

‘‘They all want to see the mana of cannabis restored, and stop it being denigrated and insulted.’’

Exact details of the 2020 referendum have yet to be released but a yes vote would likely result in the sale, purchase and consumptio­n of cannabis being made legal for people aged 20 and over.

If cannabis is legalised, Gray and Mayell want Whakamana to become a licensed dispensary. They envisage the institute becoming a hub of cannabis innovation, and a co-working space for entreprene­urs working in the sector.

 ?? ALDEN WILLIAMS/STUFF ?? Cookie Time founder Michael Mayell, right, has teamed up with former Dunedin cannabis museum curator Abe Gray to create a cannabis institute in two heritage-listed Christchur­ch buildings.
ALDEN WILLIAMS/STUFF Cookie Time founder Michael Mayell, right, has teamed up with former Dunedin cannabis museum curator Abe Gray to create a cannabis institute in two heritage-listed Christchur­ch buildings.

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