TheBostonCannabis Club

Lifestyle hub

Boston, curated

Six pillars across the city's neighborhoods, the food scene, the music venues, and the commuter rhythm. The dispensary map and the full editorial library.

  • 45articles
  • 6pillars
  • 16towns
  • 154dispensaries
  • 32events

Lifestyle

The pillars in detail

Every pillar's flagship guide + recent supporting coverage.

Pillar

Neighborhood Guides

Back Bay, Beacon Hill, South End, Somerville, Cambridge — the dispensary and cannabis culture of each.

8 articles
Flagship

Pillar

Dining & Late-Night

The restaurants, pizza windows, and after-dispensary eats that keep Boston evenings honest.

5 articles
Flagship

Pillar

Harbor & Waterfront

The North End walks, Seaport decks, and harbor rhythms — framed around the public-space rules.

8 articles
Flagship

Pillar

Music & Arts

TD Garden, the Sinclair, Royale, the ICA — the venues where Boston cannabis culture shows up.

8 articles
Flagship

Pillar

College-Town Cannabis

For adults 21+ working, living, or visiting the Harvard Square / Kendall / BU corridor.

8 articles
Flagship

Pillar

Sports & Game Day

Fenway and the Garden game-day rhythm — cannabis framed around the venue rules, never inside them.

8 articles
Flagship

Place

Town-by-town

Every town hub with its own articles, dispensaries, and events.

All neighborhoods

Beacon Hill

Federal-era brick, gas lamps, and Charles Street’s shop-and-restaurant rhythm just over the Common from downtown.

North End

Hanover Street’s Italian-American food row, Paul Revere’s house, and the densest restaurant footprint in the city.

Back Bay

Newbury Street shopping, the Boston Public Library, brownstone blocks, and the high-end restaurant corridor on Boylston.

South End

Tremont Street’s restaurant row, the SoWa arts district, brownstone blocks, and a Sunday brunch culture that runs all afternoon.

Jamaica Plain

Centre Street’s indie restaurant row, Jamaica Pond walks, and a long-running counterculture-friendly neighborhood character.

South Boston

Castle Island walks, the Seaport’s glass-tower restaurant scene, and the working-class corner-bar culture that still anchors the neighborhood.

Allston

Harvard Ave’s student-zone food row, BU and BC adjacencies, and the cheapest serious eating in the city.

Fenway

Fenway Park’s neighborhood, the Museum of Fine Arts, the Gardner, and the densest cluster of museums-and-Sox in the city.

Kenmore

Kenmore Square’s Citgo sign, Boston University’s gateway, and the bar-and-restaurant runway between Fenway and Back Bay.

Charlestown

Bunker Hill, the Navy Yard, the USS Constitution, and a self-contained brick-row-house neighborhood across the harbor from the North End.

Brighton

Allston’s western neighbor, Boston College’s footprint, and a quieter residential rhythm that’s drawn off-campus students for decades.

Mission Hill

Northeastern’s western edge, the Mission Church, and the brick-and-greenway neighborhood between the Fenway and JP.

Roxbury

Boston’s historic Black cultural center, Dudley/Nubian Square’s renaissance, and a deep food-and-music identity that’s shaping the city’s next decade.

Dorchester

The largest neighborhood in Boston, deeply diverse food scene, and the JFK Library on the harbor’s southern edge.

Roslindale

Roslindale Square’s small-town walkable downtown, Arnold Arboretum adjacency, and a quieter family-neighborhood pace.

West End

TD Garden’s neighborhood, the Museum of Science, and the post-urban-renewal high-rise district between the North End and Beacon Hill.