Streamer Coffee Shibuya
Latte Art in a Soup-Bowl Mug
Hiroshi Sawada's flagship: an oversized Streamer Latte built as a canvas for elaborate foam art, in a warehouse-style space that helped define Tokyo café culture.
Last verified: 2026-05-16
Why Japanese People Love It
Streamer Coffee Company was founded by Hiroshi Sawada, a barista who won the 2008 World Latte Art Championship and then opened a café built around that single skill. The Shibuya flagship (2010) was one of the first Tokyo cafés to treat latte art as the headline rather than a flourish — the signature Streamer Latte is served in a soup-bowl-sized mug specifically to give the barista a large canvas for the elaborate, multi-layered foam designs the shop is known for.
The space mattered as much as the coffee. Streamer Shibuya's warehouse aesthetic — exposed concrete, industrial fittings, American-café scale — was influential in the early 2010s, when most Tokyo coffee was either kissaten or chain. Alongside Bear Pond, Fuglen, and Nozy, Streamer is part of the founding cohort that built Tokyo's third-wave identity, though its angle was always more West Coast / latte-art than Nordic-minimal or single-origin-purist.
For visitors, it's an accessible, high-energy stop rather than a contemplative one. The coffee is good, the latte art is genuinely a craft demonstration (not just decoration), and the room is large and comfortable enough for laptop work or a long sit — which the more austere founding-cohort cafés deliberately discourage. It's the social, photogenic end of the Tokyo third-wave spectrum.
How to Experience It
Find it at 1-20-28 Shibuya, about an 8-minute walk from JR Shibuya — slightly outside the main scramble chaos, in a calmer block. The warehouse facade is distinctive; the room is large with both counter and table seating.
Open 8:00-20:00 every day. Mornings are calm and good for the full latte-art experience without a queue; afternoons fill with Shibuya foot traffic. The space accommodates lingering, so it works as a work-and-coffee stop as well as a quick one.
Order the Streamer Latte at the counter to get the signature oversized mug and foam design. The baristas execute the art to order — it's worth watching the pour rather than only photographing the result. Standard espresso drinks and drip are also available for those who want the coffee without the showpiece.
What to Order
The Streamer Latte is the order — the soup-bowl mug, the elaborate foam, the reason the shop exists. It's a milk-forward drink by design; if you want to taste the espresso more directly, order it alongside a separate short shot. The Military Latte (matcha-and-espresso layered) is the other signature, visually striking and less sweet than it looks.
For non-milk options the drip and pour-over are competent but not the point here — Streamer's identity is the milk-and-foam craft. Pastries are available as accompaniment; they're supporting cast, not the reason to come.
Plan your visit
| Area | Shibuya |
|---|---|
| Category | Café & Coffee |
| Price range | ¥600-1200 |
| Hours | 8:00-20:00 |
| Closed | なし |
| Access | JR渋谷駅から徒歩8分・渋谷1-20-28 |
| Reservations | Walk-in only |
| English menu | ✓ Available Yes — English menu and English-comfortable staff |
| English support | Yes — internationally oriented café |
| Last verified | 2026-05-16 |
Nearby Experiences
You're within ten minutes of Kushikatsu Tanaka Shibuya and Han no Daidokoro Bettei on Dogenzaka for an evening meal, and Kurand Sake Market Shibuya for a sake follow-up. The Shibuya Scramble is eight minutes east.
For a Tokyo third-wave coffee tour, Streamer (latte art / West Coast) contrasts sharply with Bear Pond Espresso (strict, ristretto-focused) in Shimokitazawa and Fuglen Tokyo (Nordic) in Tomigaya — together they map the different philosophies of the city's founding specialty cafés.