Native American tribe opens huge pot store near Fremont Street in Las Vegas
Las Vegas’ newest retailer of recreational marijuana is also by far one of the biggest. Guests to the sprawling, 10,000-square-foot store are greeted by water walls, and exposed wooden posts and beams that give the place an upscale feel.
Benny Tso, chairman of the tiny Las Vegas Paiute Tribe, said 300 to 500 customers have visited each day since the Oct. 16 opening. He expects that number to rise significantly.
Roughly 15 to 20 of the 100 or so employees are Paiutes, a tribe in Nevada that has just 56 members. “It’s an economic driver for our tribe, to help our people,†Tso said.
Unlike bargain prices at some smoke shops — those selling tobacco, that is — on Native American reservations, prices at the NuWu Cannabis Marketplace in downtown Las Vegas are “competitive†with other sellers of marijuana.
In addition to the wide variety of cannabis-infused products and paraphernalia found at other marijuana retailers, the store sells merchandise such as T-shirts and ball caps. There’s also a display case stocked with THC-laced products for dogs that claim to help with problems such as excessive barking or itching.
The products at NuWu — it means “the people†in the Paiute language — are priced similarly to those at other stores. The tribe pays the same 10% excise tax to the Nevada Department of Taxation. “We’re under a microscope, because we’re tribal,†Tso said. “We want to play fair. We want to be totally transparent.â€
The store is at 1235 Paiute Circle, along North Main Street just north of East Washington Avenue. That’s about 1.5 miles from the popular Fremont Street Experience. Recreational marijuana became legal in Nevada on July 1.
Info: NuWu Cannabis Marketplace, (702) 844-2707
ALSO
Just in time for Halloween: Las Vegas’ new Haunted Museum created by ‘Ghost Adventures’ host
Bee hotels are all the buzz. Here are five in the West where you can meet these pollinators
What to expect from Pixar Pier at Disney California Adventure
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.