To be direct: the answer is no. There's no spatial curvature for Newtonian gravity, when it is rendered in geometric form as a curved space-time geometry. All the curvature is in time.
One of the most prominent ways this stands out is in the relation between radial distances versus circumferences. For Newtonian gravity, the circumferences $C_1$ and $C_2$ of two coplanar circular orbits will differ by $2π$ times their respective radii; or more precisely: the closest distance between the respective orbits will be $|r_1 - r_2|$, where $r_1 = C_1/(2π)$ and $r_2 = C_2/(2π)$.
For General Relativity, approximating the exterior of the gravitating body by the Schwarzschild metric, the closest distance between the orbits will be
$$\left|\sqrt{r_1(r_1 - r_0)} - \sqrt{r_2(r_2 - r_0)} + r_0 \log{\frac{\sqrt{r_1} + \sqrt{r_1 - r_0}}{\sqrt{r_2} + \sqrt{r_2 - r_0}}}\right|,$$
where $r_0 = (2GM)/c^2$, with $G$ being Newton's constant and $M$ the mass of the gravitating body, where $r_1$ and $r_2$ are as above. By assumption, we're talking about the exterior of the body, so $r_1 > r_0$ and $r_2 > r_0$. In the limit as $c → ∞$, $r_0 → 0$, and the distance approaches the limit
$$\left|\sqrt{{r_1}^2} - \sqrt{{r_2}^2}\right| = \left|r_1 - r_2\right|,$$
where $r_1 > 0$ and $r_2 > 0$.
The spatial curvature will also show up as a precessing of a fixed axis - such as that of a gyroscope - when taken around the gravitating body in an orbit. That test can be done ... and has been done, on the space shuttle.
The $r$ coordinate in the Schwarzschild metric, in General Relativity, is actually not radial distance at all, but is the "circumference radius" - that is: the circumference divided by $2π$. The two do not coincide in relativity, because of the spatial curvature.