The state is due to inspect the facility next month as part of Ohio's medical marijuana program, and Cresco still needs a permit to process the plants, according to CEO and Founder Charles Bachtell.
The facility sits next to Antioch University Midwest along East Dayton-Yellow Springs Road. It features a 23,294-square-foot, state-of-the-art steel greenhouse that is separate from the 26,445-square-foot area where the marijuana is processed. The plants will be grown in secure, climate-controlled environments using 85 percent renewable energy, according to Cresco.
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The plants will need about 90 days to grow before they can be harvested, Bachtell said. The greenhouse can be controlled to allow long hours of light or complete darkness.
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After the plants are grown and harvested, Cresco will process them into cannabis oil products. The various products that Cresco will make include pharmaceutical-grade oral sprays, sublingual digestible tablets and transdermal patches.
If Cresco passes inspection and is issued a processing license, the first plants ready for harvest will be in October, Bachtell said.