
At the same time, it was odd to have walked 10 minutes from Shibuya’s busy intersection—a place of giant billboards, thousands of people, and a cacophony of sound—to find myself at…an Italian bar.
Inside, owner Kyohei Nishiya stood behind a wooden counter. His co-worker Yoshiki Okada directed me to a spot at the far end of the counter. The two wore button-up shirts, neckties, and dress pants—the Coffeehouse Nishiya uniform.
Kyohei Nishiya (right) and Yoshiki Okada
I ordered an espresso shake and asked Nishiya how he started.
He said that coffee wasn’t his entry to barista work; it was meeting a real barista for the first time. He said the guy was cool, sophisticated, and a smooth talker. Nishiya was impressed. “It wasn’t what was in the cup that drew me to coffee,” he said. “It was everything around it.”


Nishiya Coffeehouse opened in September 2013. The first year was slow. At that time, there wasn’t any clear signage out front; passersby thought it was a bar and simply kept passing on by. With time the menu was revised, and locals started coming. The pudding and the banana espresso shake gained a reputation. Business picked up, a crew of regulars developed, and, Nishiya says, they’ve been busy ever since.
Espresso shake at Nishiya Coffeehouse
Nishiya said the menu develops based on customer needs. “[It] is all the standards,” he said. “I’m not interested in making something completely new. But if a customer asks for something, I want to provide it for them. I take the standard recipe, then add a little or take a little. That’s it.”
“The standards are the standards because they’re reliable,” he continued. “Established.”
Espresso tonic
Whereas other successful businesses spur talk of growth, Nishiya isn’t interested in expansion. He says that if he wasn’t the one making the drinks, he couldn’t maintain quality control. I asked about Okada, zipping around taking orders and clearing the counter.
“He makes drinks too—I mean, I need to rest sometimes. But when I’m here, I make the drinks.”
Watching them work, I saw something of the traditional craftsman in Nishiya. The cafe was a physical manifestation of his style, a particular aura you felt in the service and tasted in the coffee. The whole reason it’s called Coffeehouse Nishiya, after all, is because it’s where you’ll find him.
Cappuccino
Pudding
Customers came, went, talked, and drank. Nishiya made drinks, Okada delivered them, and the two engaged in playful banter.
I wondered, is this what an Italian bar feels like?
There was no way of knowing. But what mattered was that Nishiya had—with inspiration from his favorite coffee shops—created a space that shared the style and service that most impressed him when he started in coffee some 13 years ago. That seemed like quite a feat.

Hengtee Lim (@Hent03) is a Sprudge.com staff writer based in Tokyo. Read more Hengtee Lim on Sprudge.
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