A real local stop at the edge of Nolita and Soho, close to Bowery and the New Museum.
Nolita / Soho • Spring Street
Specialty coffee with a downtown point of view.
Alden's Coffee brings refined espresso, house signature drinks, pastries, tea, and everyday hospitality to Spring Street at the edge of Nolita and Soho.
About Alden's
Built for the people looking for coffee in Nolita, but staying because the room feels right.
Alden's sits on Spring Street where Soho motion meets Nolita texture. The idea is straightforward: serve beautifully made coffee in a room that feels warm, local, and polished enough to return to every day.
That means espresso standards pulled with care, signature drinks that feel distinctly Alden's, pastries that make the stop worthwhile, and service that stays welcoming instead of performative. It is a neighborhood cafe with a fashion-adjacent downtown calm.
Espresso, matcha, 22-hour cold brew, signature drinks, pastries, food, and bulk orders.
A 4.8 Google rating and 63 public reviews add real neighborhood trust.
Visit Us
Spring Street, right where Nolita edges into Soho.
Alden's is located at 8 Spring Street, close to Bowery and just steps from the New Museum. It works as a neighborhood coffee stop, a meeting point, a quick pickup, or the place you reset between errands downtown.
Gallery
The room, the bar, the pastries, the carry-out moment.
A softer edit of the cafe keeps the photography feeling warm, local, and unmistakably downtown.
Journal
Neighborhood notes from Spring Street.
Short editorial pieces give more context around the cafe, the neighborhood, and what people actually come in for around Nolita and Soho.
Order Online
Pickup should feel as considered as the room itself.
From studio runs to office mornings, the order flow stays clear, brand-led, and easy to move through without losing the feel of Alden's.
Contact
Reach the cafe, plan a larger coffee order, or follow along daily.
Every key contact path stays visible so the site supports real business actions: directions, calls, orders, and ongoing neighborhood familiarity.