image description
Now to complete the journey from seed to the store counter, they plan to open up Potency, a marijuana dispensary in suites 1 and 2
image description
With the help of his business partner Sonia Orenstein, just a few hundred feet down East they opened Mass Yield Cultivation - a 5,000 square foot marijuana cultivation center.
image description
The well-stocked Berkshire Hydroponics has shelves of soils, nutrients, teas, and whatever else a beginner or experienced gardener may need.

Berkshire Hydroponics Expanding Into Cannabis Retail

Print Story | Email Story
Mack said he hopes to open up the dispensary in December or January.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Hydroponics is fully integrated and the gardening supplier has not only expanded into marijuana cultivation but now is working to open up a dispensary.
 
"We have been very fortunate to be able to keep on growing," owner Tim Mack said. "Everything is coming to fruition."
 
Mack started with Berkshire Hydroponics, an indoor/outdoor gardening supplier focusing on GMO-free, organic gardening, about seven years ago.
 
The well-stocked store has shelves of soils, nutrients, teas, and whatever else a beginner or experienced gardener may need.
 
Mack said over the years, they have served a loyal customer base well but found over time there was more that they could do. So they spread beyond the four walls of suite 1 to suite 3 and 4 in their 1450 East St. location.
 
The next steps turned Mack's business into a vertically unified business. With the help of his business partner Sonia Orenstein, just a few hundred feet down East they opened Mass Yield Cultivation - a 5,000 square foot marijuana cultivation center.
 
Now to complete the journey from seed to the store counter, they plan to open up Potency, a marijuana dispensary in suites 1 and 2
 
"Everything really fell into place, and the spaces became available. I never envisioned it going that way," he said. "Now we supply everything starting with seeds. I am the only one in the state that is fully integrated from seed to end product...I am working on building a respectable small business for my kids' future."
 
Mack has two boys, Lukas age 10, and Greyson, age 6.
  
Mack said he hopes to open up the dispensary in December or January. He pointed to the new sign atop the storefront excited to eventually see the storefront busy with customers.
 
Mack kept coming back to his loyal customers who make Berkshire Hydroponics more than a store, but a family.
 
"I like to keep everything local and everyone has been so supportive," Mack said. "The environment here is very friendly. People come in and they start talking. They exchange numbers and tips. I like my business to run like a family, and that is what I want at Potency."
 
He said Potency will sell products from other vendors as well as their own products.
 
"It is definitely, from what I see, a different style build-out," Mack said. "We want to have our own in-house brand...we want to put out a quality product."
 
Mack said he hopes to have a vendor day to help promote other small businesses once Potency opens.
 
At his core, Mack is a gardener and is most passionate about Mass Yield.
 
"The growing is where our passion really is," he said. "Gardening is a passion. It is more about that than the money. We want to help people. We want to do our part."
 
He said he plans to expand into outdoor and greenhouse cultivation.
 
He said he makes a point to hire local contractors and local people to handle each phase of the business. He attributes his tight-knit team and customer base to the business's success.
 
"I appreciate everyone that has been here and has shopped here from the beginning and those who continue to come here," he said. "Because of them, we have grown beyond our one small suite, and we are excited to continue to serve our community as we expand."
 
 
 
 
 
 

View All Business Profiles




Pittsfield Community Development OKs Airport Project, Cannabis Amendment

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Community Development Board has supported plans for a new hangar at the airport and a change to the cannabis ordinance.

Lyon Aviation, located in the Pittsfield Municipal Airport, plans to remove an existing "T" style hangar and replace it with a new, 22,000-square-foot hangar.  The existing one is said to be small and in poor condition while the new build will accommodate a variety of plane sizes including a larger passenger jet.

"There's no traffic impacts, there's no utilities to speak of," Robert Fournier of SK Design Group explained.

"I'll say that we did review this at length with the airport commission in the city council and this is the way we were instructed to proceed was filing this site plan review and special permit application."

The application states that the need for additional hangar space is "well documented" by Lyon, Airport Manager Daniel Shearer, and the airport's 2020 master plan. The plan predicts that 15 additional hangar spaces will be needed by 2039 and this project can accommodate up to 10 smaller planes or a single large aircraft.

Lyon Aviation was founded in 1982 as a fix-based operator that provided fuel, maintenance, hangar services, charter, and flight instruction.

This is not the only project at the Tamarack Road airport, as the City Council recently approved a $300,000 borrowing for the construction of a new taxi lane. This will cover the costs of an engineering phase and will be reduced by federal and state grant monies that have been awarded to the airport.

The local share required is $15,000, with 95 percent covered by the Federal Aviation Administration and the state Department of Transportation's Aeronautics division.

View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories