
There’s coffee out there, hidden in the pockets between the buildings, lights, and ceaseless traffic. The question for most travelers is, where to find it?
If you happen to be visiting Skytree, it’s much closer than you’d think.

The first-floor cafe is a bustling space made up of four distinct stations: front counter, espresso bar, brew bar, and bar counter, with a barista for each. The cafe is a living, breathing example of owners Daichi Matsubara and Rena Hirai’s focus on barista training.
Daichi Matsubara and Rena Hirai
“Barista work is about passion, study, and customer service,” says Matsubara. “Think of it like this: the importers, the roasters, and the farmers don’t often interact with customers, but the barista does all the time. Sharing the links in the chain [of seed to cup] is the barista’s job; they’re an ambassador. So the job is not just making coffee, it’s customer service and sharing information.”
Matsubara and Hirai see their shop and their staff as ambassadors not just for quality coffee, but for the developing coffee culture here in Japan, too.
“Even though we could have chosen a spot closer to where we roast [in Arakawa], Oshiage is really nice,” says Hirai. “There are lots of tourists, and we think that makes for a great chance to share Japanese coffee culture. When people come to see Skytree, they can see the state of Japan’s coffee, too.”



“Of course there’s the fame and popularity involved,” says Hirai, “but more important than that is developing an understanding for taste to share with customers.”
Cold-brew gin & tonic at Unlimited
Unlimited has also gained some renown for its coffee cocktails. Though still a rarity in Tokyo, Hirai sees cocktails as a window for some into coffee discovery, and a chance for smaller coffee shops to expand their service, turning a daytime coffee shop into a nighttime cocktail bar. Also a certified Japan Coffee in Good Spirits judge, Hirai says the key to a coffee cocktail starts with the coffee. “First, make coffee the main element,” she says. “After you understand the flavor and the extraction method, you play with spirits, alcohol, and syrups that deepen that flavor.”

When you talk to Matsubara and Hirai, you realize that Unlimited Coffee Bar reaches into all areas of coffee development—roasting, training, brewing—to better understand and improve them at the customer’s first point of contact: the barista. The two see this point of contact as the chance to express something new and build bridges.

“When I share good coffee, it makes me happy,” adds Hirai. “And sharing those flavors is a beautiful thing. That moment when a trainee-barista gets it, and they discover the flavor they were looking for, that particular smile makes our job feel especially meaningful.”
Hengtee Lim (@Hent03) is a Sprudge.com staff writer based in Tokyo. Read more Hengtee Lim on Sprudge.
Photos courtesy of Sonia Cao.
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