See our
aerial video of oceanfront homes on Oahu's North Shore.
Every winter the roads to the North Shore of Oahu become one long caravan. Everybody wants to see those waves. You'll commonly hear excited talk about 20 or 30 foot breakers rolling in up there. The truth is, they're really a lot bigger. The actual height of the waves are two to three times the stated measurement because it's scaled. A '7 foot wave' is more like 15 to 20 feet high in real terms. As confusing as this system is, it fits the North Shore culture perfectly.
North Shore Oahu real estate likes to be understated, too. The desire to remain small is a common theme on the North Shore. Though increasing crowds come to watch the swells, you won't find a community building up in response to this windfall of potential business. You do have some development happening, mainly around
Haleiwa, but all of it on a very modest sized, low-rise basis. The local battle cry of 'Keep the Country Country' is more than a slogan, it's a line in the sand.
There's nothing even resembling a high-rise condo up here. In fact, it can sometimes be difficult to even see the houses if you're just driving through. North Shore homes are often set back from the main roads, shielded from traffic and view by not only distance but walls or natural enclosures. The separation is testimony to local residents' love of privacy and quiet as well as a prevalent streak of independence.
The North Shore takes in the area from
Mokuleia in the west, arcing eastward to end in
Laie. It truly is, as they'll proudly tell you, Country. Traveling through these locales, which include hillside communities as well as oceanside, you're usually on 2 lane roads surrounded by an environment that is definitively rural. For stretches you won't see any buildings or homes. You're a world away from Oahu's southern coast.
Outsiders, if they do know any parts of North Shore's real estate, tend to think of Haleiwa. It's understandable, because it does have a center of sorts, with restaurants and stores selling the work of local artists and craftsmen, along with the expected surf gear. Its laid back feel and the buildings either modeled on the old plantation style or actually from that era add greatly to the charm.
The Neighborhoods Those looking at North Shore real estate, however, have a much wider range of places they should consider, each providing something a little different, while remaining distinctly of this area.
- Mokuleia: Travel far enough west across the Northern coastline of Oahu and you'll end up in Mokuleia. That's also where your travels will end because you can't go any further on the coast past here. Homes in this part of Oahu's North Shore are a mix of quaint beach cottages and huge estate lots. Tell someone you live on Crozier Drive and you'll see their eyes light up, imagining the incredible oceanfront properties this street is famous for in Hawaii. A must see for ocean loving home shoppers.
- Kawailoa: Lying immediately north of Haleiwa Town, but just south of Waimea Bay is the neighborhood of Kawailoa, sometimes called the North Shore's Kahala. All these North Shore Oahu homes are walking distance to the beach. Some lots have an acre of beachfront property and the white sands here are the envy of the Island. Special attention should be paid to Papailoa Road for those seeking some of the best luxury living on the North Shore.
- Pupukea: This collection of homes falls under Haleiwa's umbrella, but lies west of Waimea Bay. Just a couple of minutes inland from Kam Hwy, after a few steep turns, you'll enter a community of 1 to 2 acre lots. These could be described as semi-rural, luxury properties, known for the collection of animals out and about. These large houses revel in their expansive properties, sporting horses, chickens, dogs and other wildlife that bring a vitality to the district.
- Sunset: Further west is the famous district of Sunset, yet another neighborhood that has Haleiwa as their mailing address. The waves are notoriously massive off these shores, making your view from these upscale oceanfront homes awe-inspiring. You have a permanent front-seat on sights that cause traffic jams.
- Turtle Bay: Not a neighborhood, but a top resort that's almost on the northernmost point of Oahu, located with the Kuilima neighborhood. You live the genteel tropical beach life here. It's the Permanent Vacation so many envision in their dreams. This dream is reality as the owner of one of the Ocean Villas, Turtle Bay's luxury beachfront condos. Low-rise, they fit right into the North Shore Oahu's real estate tradition, featuring up to 4 bedrooms. Swim, surf, beachcomb, then head to the resort's golf course, restaurants or even do some shopping, all without going outside the property gates. A very unique entry in Oahu’s real estate market.
- Laie: Completing the North Shore arc as its southeastern point, Laie is well known for being the site of Brigham Young University and the Polynesian Cultural Center. This is a small, tropical town, though, with some beautiful beaches that echo old Hawaii. So quiet and in such unspoiled settings, you feel like you're discovering these stretches of sand. If you wish to have the Pacific as your daily backdrop, you should look at the Naupaka St homes on the Laniloa Peninsula. The peninsula sticks right out into the ocean, so houses on both sides get incredible views of the waters and coastline. Most homes in Laie are modest, reflecting the low maintenance, no worries lifestyle of this place. The exceptions are some magnificent oceanfront estate properties that take in anywhere from 10,000 sq ft to as much as 3 acres of real estate.
Buying a home on Oahu's North Shore is an adventure. You're diving into a unique way of life, different even from parts of Oahu just a few miles away. It's a throwback to the old, smaller scale Hawaii, where Man and Nature meet on a more equal footing. Shopping malls, high-rise buildings and multi-lane highways are forbidden here and, as long as the community can help it, they will remain so.
History of Oahu's North Shore The mere mention of the North Shore of Oahu means one thing to most people around the world: Surfing. That, however, is only a recently development since the 1980's. Before that time, the monstrous waves this coast is known for were thought to be unrideable. Too big and too powerful.
It wasn't until modern surfing techniques and boards came into being that successful attempts were made to take on these towering swells. The rest is history, as they say, but it's not the whole history of the North Shore. Not by a long shot.
This part of Oahu was probably the last settled by the Native Hawaiians, communities finally being established in the 12th Century. Those early inhabitants immediately found that the not only was the land extremely fertile, there were also numerous natural springs, making agriculture the primary occupation from the start.
One of the primary land divisions, or ahupu'a, of the North Shore was uniquely reserved for the Island's high priest (Kahuna Nui) beginning in the late 1100's. This designation remained part of the title for more than 700 years, the last one being Hewahewa, who held the position under Kamehameha I. After the king's death, with the eventual end of the kapu system under Queen Kaahumanu, that ownership was taken from this office. It was yet another sign of the vast changes sweeping Hawaii's culture at this time.
The agricultural value of the North Shore lands remained high, its focus shifting to sugar and pineapple plantations starting in the late 1800's.
Benjamin Dillingham, owner of much of these farmlands, built the first resort in Hawaii, the Haleiwa Hotel, up here at the final stop of the same railway that transported sugarcane and supplies to and from his plantations. In a way, the birthplace of our tourism industry was here on Oahu's North Shore.
The closing of those plantations, which happened over the last decades of the 1900's, quieted things down as many had to leave due to the abrupt loss of employment opportunities. Fortunately, they didn't stay that way long as the allure of the big waves attracted more and more people to come see the famous North Shore waves for themselves.
Tourism is now the primary economic force, a mixed blessing that provides jobs, but also brings crowds and an ever-present threat of development. For a place where most residents' cars sport a 'Keep the Country Country' bumper sticker, this is a major issue. All of this isn't just history, it's the community's constant struggle to maintain their place and environment in line with that history. A new, interesting chapter is being written right now and nobody truly knows what the end will look like.
Other Pages