From Whopper to Weed: Jacksonville’s First Black-Owned Dispensary Eyes Downtown Debut

The flame-broiled burgers are out, and medical cannabis is in at 210 E. State St.

Miami-based GŪD Essence plans to open what it calls Jacksonville’s first Black-owned cannabis dispensary inside the former Burger King on the edge of Downtown. The company is aiming for a late-fall 2026 launch, turning the long-empty fast-food spot into a medical cannabis storefront meant to serve patients from Brooklyn through the Eastside and north to Springfield. The project adds one more piece to the slow-and-steady puzzle of downtown retail revival.

According to the Jacksonville Business Journal, GŪD Essence says the shop will be the only licensed cannabis retailer along that stretch of the city when it opens, filling a hole in the urban core’s retail lineup. The Business Journal identifies the company as Black-owned and confirms the dispensary will occupy the converted Burger King building downtown.

Site and permits

City permit files and local coverage show that the 3,800-to-4,000-square-foot building at 210 E. State St. has already gone through interior demolition. Plans under review call for about $350,000 worth of interior build-out along with new electrical work and landscaping. Orlando-based Alakai Capital bought the block for about $1.5 million, and the project lists S.R. Construction Services and Willard & Sons Electric as contractors, per the Jacksonville Daily Record.

Who’s behind GŪD Essence

GŪD Essence describes itself as a Florida-grown, Black-led medical cannabis company and flags Jacksonville as “Coming Soon” on its GŪD Essence dispensaries page. “The Downtown Jacksonville site gives us the opportunity to revitalize an existing building and bring new life to the urban core,” CEO Jasmine Johnson said in comments quoted by the Jacksonville Daily Record.

What it means for downtown shoppers

Local reporting notes that the dispensary is expected to plug a retail gap in the urban core, giving medical cannabis patients a closer option than current outlets located farther from downtown. The move lines up with growing investor attention around Gateway Jax, Riverwalk extensions and the stadium district, positioning the property in the middle of a cluster of big-ticket projects…

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