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Green Horizons, a cannabis cultivation facility in Coachella, California, is expanding. The company, founded by Carlos “Los” Arias, Tommy Hilfiger, and Michael Meade, aims to be a leader in the state's cannabis market. They are using sustainable practices and plan to launch their brand, SOL, with Tommy Hilfiger's help. Ally Hilfiger is also involved, focusing on cannabis de-stigmatization and policy reform.

Coachella’s Next Big Thing Is Here

Apr 28, 2025

A.J. Herrington

Cannabis Now



To many people, the southern California desert may not seem like the best
place to build a world-class cannabis cultivation facility. But for Green
Horizons, the company’s location in the city of Coachella is an integral
part of its plan for success in the Golden State’s competitive regulated
cannabis market. Combining the experience of cannabis executive Carlos
“Los” Arias, the marketing prowess of fashion icon Tommy Hilfiger and the
real estate and construction experience of developer Michael Meade, the
company has targeted 2025 as a pivotal time in its growth and evolution.

Green Horizons’ CEO Arias is a lawyer by training and one of the many
pioneers of regulated cannabis in the US. As one of the principals at
Colorado’s River Rock, he helped create cannabis cultivation and retail
infrastructure for the greater Denver area following legalization in the
state in 2012.

Arias then set his eyes on California, where he established an
18,000-square-foot indoor cannabis cultivation facility near Palm Springs
in Cathedral City. Mutual connections introduced him to Meade, who had a
vision to make the nearby city of Coachella California’s “Napa Valley of
the South,” only with weed instead of wine.
[image: Coachella Valley]The Coachella Valley. PHOTO California BLM

The Coachella Valley has an agricultural heritage going back more than a
century, and Meade believed that history could be reinvigorated with
cannabis. Working with city leaders, he helped establish the city of
Coachella’s cannabis cultivation zone and improvements to make it
operational, such as power and sewer lines. Meade also secured a two
percent tax rate for his planned operation for spearheading the development
of a local cannabis industry, giving Green Horizons a significant
competitive edge in California’s regulated market. With the green light for
development in Coachella, Meade partnered with Arias to create a premier
cannabis cultivation facility. Green Horizons’ mixed-light cultivation
facility couples the reliable desert sun with modern lighting equipment,
reportedly making it more efficient and sustainable than traditional indoor
growing operations.

Arias says that Green Horizons is “unabashed about the power of the sun,”
noting that a common misconception holds that cannabis produced in
mixed-light facilities is inferior to weed grown in more energy-intensive
indoor facilities. “We diametrically disagree with that, and we want to put
forth a path toward creating something that’s more friendly for the Earth,”
Arias says.
Blackberry Moonshine

With the sun helping to provide the light for Green Horizons’ cannabis
plants, the company uses less electricity than a traditional indoor
cultivation operation, making the facility more sustainable. The
cultivation operation also doesn’t use air conditioning, relying instead on
evaporative cooling, a method that takes far less energy to protect the
plants from the desert heat. Further savings compared to competitors come
from Coachella’s connection to the Imperial Irrigation District’s power
grid, which provides electricity at rates that Arias says are 30-40 percent
lower than Southern California Edison, the source used by much of the
region’s cannabis operators.

The Green Horizons facility has a reliable source of water from the
Colorado River via infrastructure built to support the Coachella Valley
agriculture industry. A well on the site also gives the company flexibility
in its source of irrigation water.

Construction of the first 100,000 square feet of the projected 1
million-square-foot facility began in 2022 and was completed two years
later with a ribbon-cutting ceremony in May 2024. Since then, cultivation
operations have begun, with the facility’s first harvest arriving last
November. The first four months of harvests yielded about 3,000 pounds,
which was sold in bulk or through white label operations to California
licensed cannabis brands. Arias says the facility is on pace to triple
production by summer 2025, with the first phase of the facility projected
to produce about 35,000 pounds of top-quality cannabis per year.
A glimpse of Green Horizons company culture

The next phase of Green Horizons’ plans includes developing the company’s
first brand, SOL (“sun” in Spanish). Arias says it’s an “homage to the
Coachella Valley roots.” But with Meade’s expertise lying primarily in real
estate development and Arias specializing in cannabis cultivation, they
decided to seek expert help with brand development.

“We know how to build buildings,” Arias says. “That’s what my partner,
Michael Meade knows how to do very well. I’ve cut my teeth in cultivation
and regulated markets, going back to 2012 in Colorado. What we needed was
the brand building portion.”

For that expertise, the Green Horizons executives looked to entrepreneur
and fashion mogul Tommy Hilfiger, who became a founding partner and
investor in the enterprise. Arias says he met Ally Hilfiger, Tommy’s
daughter, through the plant medicines community. Both Meade and Arias are
cancer survivors, and Ally, who was diagnosed with Lyme disease at 19 after
enduring symptoms for more than a decade, says that cannabis changed her
life. After swapping stories with one other, Arias says he and Ally quickly
became friends.

One of Tommy Hilfiger’s initial goals with Green Horizons is bringing SOL
to market. The company also bought an interest in Boast, an apparel and
lifestyle brand now co-owned by Hilfiger and Green Horizons. Starting with
these two brands, Hilfiger will help chart a path to production of Green
Horizons’ own consumer packaged goods. Arias notes that “obviously,
something like that just doesn’t happen overnight. But with somebody like
that on the ticket, we feel comfortable about doing that a little bit
further down the road.”

Ally is also intimately involved, serving as Green Horizons’ chief advocacy
officer. In this role, she says she plans to work toward the
de-stigmatization of cannabis and meaningful policy reform at the federal
level.

The post Coachella’s Next Big Thing Is Here appeared first on Cannabis Now.

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