Google: 4.3 · 1,290 reviews


Bricolage Bread & Co. occupies the ground floor of Keyakizaka Terrace in Roppongi, trading Tuesday through Sunday from 7am. Ranked in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Japan list every year from 2023 to 2025, it holds a Google rating of 4.3 across more than 1,000 reviews. Chef Ayumu Iwanaga leads the kitchen at one of Tokyo's most consistently recognised bakery-cafés.
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Bread, Craft, and the Morning Rhythm of Roppongi
By seven in the morning, Keyakizaka Terrace is still finding its pace. The glass-fronted boulevard in Roppongi Hills tends to wake later than most Tokyo retail corridors, yet Bricolage Bread & Co. is already open, the smell of fermentation and crust carrying through the ground-floor entrance before most of the surrounding restaurants have pulled their shutters. That contrast — bakery hours in a neighbourhood better known for late-night dining — says something deliberate about what this address is trying to do. It is not following Roppongi's hospitality logic; it is proposing a different one.
Japan's serious bakery culture has grown substantially since the early 2000s, when a generation of Japanese bakers returned from training in France and began applying local rice and grain sensibilities to levain traditions. What emerged over the following two decades is a category of craft bakery that sits at some remove from both the French original and the industrial shokupan loaf that dominates convenience-store shelves. Tokyo is now one of the densest markets in the world for this kind of production: small batch, slow ferment, sourced grain, consumed on premises or boxed to carry. Bricolage Bread & Co., under Chef Ayumu Iwanaga, occupies that tier. The name itself , bricolage, the French term for making something from whatever is at hand , signals an approach rooted in improvisation and material attention rather than fixed formula.
Where It Sits in Tokyo's Café and Bakery Scene
Tokyo's premium casual dining tier, as catalogued by Opinionated About Dining, covers an enormous range of formats: ramen counters, soba specialists, izakaya, and , increasingly , bakery-cafés that run food programs sophisticated enough to attract the same scrutiny as full-service restaurants. Bricolage Bread & Co. has appeared on the OAD Casual Japan list in three consecutive years: ranked 37th in both 2023 and 2024, then 40th in 2025. Sustained inclusion at that level, across multiple panels and years, reflects consistent execution rather than a single moment of visibility. The slight shift from 37th to 40th in 2025 is worth noting without over-reading: the OAD list has expanded in coverage and competition in that period, and the venue's absolute standing has remained strong.
That peer context matters. The OAD Casual Japan list does not separate bakeries from izakaya or ramen shops; it ranks by the experience relative to expectations, which means Bricolage Bread & Co. is being measured against a broad pool of Tokyo's most talked-about informal addresses. Holding a position inside the top 40 puts it in the same conversation as category-defining casual venues across the city. For comparison, the full-service end of Tokyo dining runs through a different register entirely: Harutaka, L'Effervescence, and RyuGin all operate at three Michelin stars and price accordingly. Bricolage Bread & Co. enters a different part of the spectrum, one where the discipline is craft production rather than tasting-menu theater.
Its Google rating of 4.3 across more than 1,000 reviews , a sample large enough to carry statistical weight , confirms that the venue's standing on curated lists tracks with broad audience response. That alignment between specialist critical ranking and general visitor experience is not automatic in Tokyo's competitive casual tier; it is a signal of consistent delivery across different types of visitors.
For another Tokyo bakery worth tracking in the same category conversation, see Centre Bakery.
The Cultural Logic of the Japanese Craft Bakery
To understand why a bakery-café earns serious critical attention in Japan, it helps to understand how Japanese food culture treats precision in any format. The same obsessive attention to fermentation timing, grain selection, and crust temperature that defines high-end sushi or kaiseki has migrated into the bread category in a way that has few equivalents elsewhere. A Japanese craft baker approaching levain is not merely adapting a French technique; they are applying a domestic perfectionism that treats every production variable as a decision with consequences. The result is bread that often reads as a synthesis: the structure of French or Scandinavian sourdough, calibrated to Japanese expectations around texture, hydration, and crumb.
Roppongi is an unusual neighbourhood for this kind of address. The district's food identity has long been shaped by its international population and late-night economy, but Roppongi Hills , the complex in which Keyakizaka Terrace sits , operates as a more curated micro-environment within that broader zone. The complex draws a mix of office workers, gallery visitors, hotel guests, and weekend shoppers, which gives a morning-to-early-evening bakery-café a more natural footfall pattern than the surrounding streets might suggest. Opening at 7am on four weekdays and both weekend days, with Monday as the weekly closure, aligns with the rhythms of that specific catchment rather than the neighbourhood's wider hospitality schedule.
Getting There and Planning Your Visit
Bricolage Bread & Co. is located at 6 Chome-15-1 Keyakizaka Terrace, 1F, Roppongi, Minato City, Tokyo. The address sits inside Roppongi Hills, accessible from Roppongi Station on the Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line and the Toei Oedo Line, with the Hills complex a short walk from either exit. The Keyakizaka Terrace building faces the Keyakizaka boulevard, which runs alongside the complex's retail strip.
Hours run Tuesday through Sunday, 7am to 7pm, with Monday closed. Arriving early on weekends gives the leading access to the full production run; popular items at well-regarded Tokyo bakeries in this tier typically sell through before midday. No booking is required for a café visit, which makes this one of the more accessible addresses in this section of the OAD rankings , a different proposition from the reservation-only counters that dominate the leading of Tokyo's formal dining tier, including the months-ahead bookings required at venues like Sézanne.
Visitors moving through Japan more broadly can use Bricolage Bread & Co. as a calibration point for the country's serious casual food culture. The same scrutiny applied to Tokyo's bakery tier travels to other cities: Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, HAJIME in Osaka, akordu in Nara, and Goh in Fukuoka each represent different points in Japan's premium food culture. Further afield, 1000 in Yokohama and 6 in Okinawa extend the picture beyond the main urban cluster.
For broader Tokyo planning, EP Club's city guides cover restaurants, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in full. International comparisons for casual-format critical recognition are worth considering alongside New York addresses such as Le Bernardin and Atomix, which represent different points on the formal-to-casual spectrum in a comparably competitive market.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 6 Chome-15-1 Keyakizaka Terrace, 1F, Roppongi, Minato City, Tokyo 106-0032
- Hours: Tuesday to Sunday, 7am to 7pm. Closed Monday.
- Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual Japan , ranked 37th (2023), 37th (2024), 40th (2025)
- Google Rating: 4.3 from 1,098 reviews
- Chef: Ayumu Iwanaga
- Format: Bakery-café, no reservation required
- Getting there: Roppongi Station (Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line / Toei Oedo Line), short walk to Roppongi Hills Keyakizaka Terrace
Cost Snapshot
A quick peer check to anchor this venue’s price and recognition.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bricolage Bread & Co. | Opinionated About Dining Casual in Japan Ranked #40 (2025); Opinionated About Di… | This venue | |
| Harutaka | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 3 Star | Sushi, ¥¥¥¥ |
| RyuGin | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 3 Star | Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥ |
| L'Effervescence | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 3 Star | French, ¥¥¥¥ |
| HOMMAGE | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Innovtive French, French, ¥¥¥¥ |
| MAZ | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Innovative, ¥¥¥¥ |
At a Glance
- Modern
- Cozy
- Trendy
- Elegant
- Brunch
- Casual Hangout
- Family
- Sake Program
- Local Sourcing
- Street Scene
Stylish modern interior with high ceilings, concrete finishes, timber trims, and homely touches like dried flowers; wood-dominated seating areas with a relaxing yet busy atmosphere, plus sunny outdoor terrace.














