Stockport Express

Going Dutch at ‘most mellow place on Earth’

Images bring back memories of cannabis cafe

- LEE GRIMSDITCH stockporte­xpress@menmedia.co.uk @stockportn­ews

IMAGES from our archives look back at the Dutch-style cannabis cafe that came to the town centre before police raids shut the venue for good.

The Dutch Experience, in Stockport, opened to a blaze of publicity in September 2001.

Modelled on Amsterdam’s coffee shops, it inspired other copycat venues to open in other parts of the UK.

With an over-18s, members only policy, the cafe was tucked away in a small parade of shops within a two-minute walk of Stockport town centre.

Press and photograph­ers were invited inside the venue on a number of occasions and one reporter described the air inside the cafe as “heavy with pungent aroma of cannabis” while people openly smoked joints and sipped coffee.

Photograph­s taken of the venue show that at first glance there was little to distinguis­h it from any other independen­t cafe of the era - apart from the prominent ‘legalize’ sign on the wall and cannabis leaf motif decoration­s.

There was also a bust of then-Prime Minister Tony

Blair on the service counter with a joint in his mouth.

People ordered food and drinks and sat around playing cards and board games and chatting.

The big difference was that weed was openly smoked at the venue.

It took about ten minutes before it was raided by Greater Manchester Police.

Officers stormed in, searched customers and arrested the cafe’s owner, however, the business was later allowed to reopen and continued to operate for several months.

The cafe attracted attention from media across the region and all over the country.

We reported how ‘even on a rainy weekday afternoon there are more than 100 people inside’.

A staff member said: “This isn’t even busy - usually they are squashed in back to back.

“We don’t seem to have quiet spells. From 10am until 10pm it is packed.’’

The visitors’ book included tributes such as ‘the most mellow place on Earth,’’ “the safe place 2 chill and get stoned all the time,’’ and “what we’ve all been waiting for”.

But, despite customers extolling the virtues of cannabis, not everyone was happy.

One convention­al Stockport cafe owner said: “It’s a nonsense the police allowed it to open in the first place; it’s having an adverse effect on Stockport’s

reputation.

“People who sell drugs will start hanging around places like this - without the owners’ knowledge maybe - and you’ll get harder things than cannabis being sold.” He added: “And who is there to keep an eye on it all?”

It wasn’t destined to last. In 2002, the cafe’s owner was jailed for three years after being found guilty of importing and supplying drugs.

In court, prosecutor­s said the cafe was an elaborate smokescree­n for the traffickin­g of drugs from Holland.

The Dutch Experience subsequent­ly closed its doors for good.

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 ?? ?? ●●Pictures taken inside the Dutch Experience cannabis cafe in Stockport in around 2001
●●Pictures taken inside the Dutch Experience cannabis cafe in Stockport in around 2001

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