Blue Bottle Coffee
Amsterdam Ave - 279 Amsterdam Ave, New York, NY 10023
Broad Street - 22 Broad St, New York, NY 10005
Bryant Park - 54 W 40th St., New York, NY 10018
Dean Street - 85 Dean St., Brooklyn, NY 11201
Gramercy Park - 257 Park Ave South, New York, NY 10010
Grand Central Place - 60 E 42nd Street, Suite 140, New York, NY 10165
Hudson Yards - 20 Hudson Yards #228, New York, NY 10018
Midtown East - 10 E 53rd Street Entrance is on 52nd St, New York, NY 10022
Midtown North - 1345 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10105
Morningside Heights - 2901 Broadway, New York, NY 10025
Moynihan Train Hall - 441 8th Ave, New York, NY 10001
Park Slope - 203 7th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11215
Rockefeller Center - 1 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10020
The Walker - 396 Broadway, New York, NY 10013
University Place - 101 University Place, New York, NY 10003
Williamsburg - 76 N. 4th Street, Store A, Brooklyn, NY 11249
World Trade Center - 150 Greenwich St, NW corner of Tower 4, New York, NY 10007
In the early 2000s, in Oakland, California, a slightly disaffected freelance musician and coffee lunatic, weary of the commercial coffee enterprise and stale, overly roasted beans, decided to open a roaster for people who were clamoring for the actual taste of fresh coffee. Using a minuscule six-pound batch roaster, he made a historic vow: “I will only sell coffee less than 48 hours out of the roaster to my guests, so they may enjoy coffee at peak flavor. I will only use the finest, most delicious, and responsibly sourced beans.” In honor of Kolshitsky’s heroics (the dude that supposedly helped saving Wien from the Turks back in 1683, you can read about him online), he named his business Blue Bottle Coffee and began another chapter in the history of coffee. Now, more than fifteen years later, and thanks to the enthusiastic support of many loyal guests, Blue Bottle Coffee has grown to a network of cafes across the U.S., Japan, and Korea. They currently have more than twenty locations in town, we list some of the most central.