Required Floor Plan Elements
OCM expects your layout to clearly show:
- Sales floor and customer areas
- Queueing or waiting areas
- Entrance, exits, and emergency exits
- Security room and camera placements
- Storage, vault, and back-of-house areas
- Employee-only zones
- Product display and point-of-sale stations
- Safe transportation of cannabis products within the premises
Your diagram must be scaled, labeled, and matched to what DOB/FDNY will approve.
ADA Accessibility Requirements (Federal Law)
All dispensaries must be accessible to people with disabilities.
Operators must meet:
- Accessible entrance (no steps unless a compliant ramp or lift is provided)
- Doorways at least 32 inches wide
- Clear floor paths for mobility devices
- Accessible sales counter (no higher than 36")
- Accessible restroom if one is provided to customers
- No layout elements that block wheelchair passage
- Signage following ADA requirements (braille, tactile signs for restrooms and exits)
ADA is federal law. There are no cannabis exceptions.
Violations can trigger lawsuits, fines, and forced redesigns.
Emergency Exit & Safety Layout Requirements
DOB and FDNY require:
- Minimum egress widths
- Correct number and placement of emergency exits
- Unobstructed exit paths at all times
- Emergency lighting and exit signage
- Sprinkler and fire alarm placements according to code
- Fire extinguisher locations
- Compliance with NYC Building Code or the local jurisdiction’s code
FDNY and DOB inspections will confirm your plan matches approved drawings.
Security & Controlled Areas (OCM + Local Code)
Your floor plan must show:
- Camera coverage for all required areas
- Vault or secured storage room
- Limited access to storage and back-of-house
- No blind spots in customer areas
- Controlled access to employee zones
- Secure product movement from delivery → storage → sales
This must align with your Security & Storage Plan and the physical buildout.
Circulation & Customer Flow
OCM expects a layout that supports:
- Safe, orderly movement of customers
- No blocked sightlines for staff
- Controlled entry / check-in process
- Clear separation between customer and non-customer areas
Poor circulation, bottlenecks, or unclear flow can lead to local code or safety violations.
Layout Consistency With Approved Plans
Before you build:
- Your architect must submit plans to DOB/FDNY (in NYC) or the local building department
- The final layout must match your approved drawings
- Any changes must be resubmitted and reapproved
A mismatch between approved plans and the final buildout can result in inspection failures or delays to your final license.
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