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5 Cool Tokyo Cafés Coffee Fans Should Add To Their Itinerary

Check out the charming coffee joint in a transformed 59-year-old wooden house.
5 Cool Tokyo Cafés Coffee Fans Should Add To Their Itinerary

Tokyo has no shortage of coffee shops that not only offer aromatic and well-brewed drinks, but also aesthetic spaces to take a breather from the shopping, eating and museum-hopping that many come to the city for. Here, we list five newish coffee destinations that opened in recent years, together with suggested places to explore in the neighbourhood after your caffeine fix.

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Don’t forget to check out: Yoyogi Park Be Stage

The 134-acre Yoyogi Park offers respite from Tokyo’s bustle. It is also home to Yoyogi National Gymnasium, designed by late architect Kenzo Tange for the 1964 Tokyo Summer Olympics. Just in front of this building with its iconic sweeping roof is Yoyogi Park Be Stage, which opened in spring 2025. The three-storey sports and wellness facility also includes F&B spaces, such as Tiki’s Tokyo – the first overseas location of the Waikiki-based grill restaurant.

The building also houses New Balance Run Hub Yoyogi Park, where visitors can find their perfect pair of running shoes via 3D measurements, and tourists can borrow shoes for a free test run in the park. Grab a coffee, smoothie or craft beer while watching skateboarders work on their grinds and land flip tricks in the skatepark in front of the building.

Don’t forget to check out: Play Mountain

Japanese designer Shin Nakahara, who helms design company Landscape Products, is behind many hip stores in Sendagaya, including Play Mountain. The store sells original furniture pieces ranging from craft to mid-century modern styles, as well as chic interior goods.

It will be hard to leave empty-handed. Designs range from chic brass bookends and sculptures by Austrian coppersmith Carl Aubock to sculptural lamps by Takeshi Awaya, a Yokohama-based maker who creates objects from parchment-like sheep, goat and deerskin. The store also hosts regular fairs featuring various designers and artisans.

Don’t forget to check out: Tokyo International Forum

Across the street from Yurakucho Station is the Tokyo International Forum, designed by American architect Rafael Viñoly. The building boasts a cable-supported glass roof that minimises the need for heavy structural supports. Curved, ship-like steel structures above the 11-storey-high atrium make for a striking feature.

The building hosts important conferences, but it also stages community events in the outdoor plaza. One of these is the Oedo Antique Market – Japan’s largest outdoor antique market – where visitors can trawl through more than 250 stalls selling Japanese pottery, tableware, kimonos and accessories. It is held on the first and third Sunday of every month, from morning until late afternoon.

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