
North Shore Club Residences
Preliminary Information – Full Audit Pending
This buildings features were determined from publicly available data, including MLS listings. While we cross-referenced additional data sources, it still likely contains incomplete or inaccurate information, as it has not yet been personally verified.
Once a building has been fully audited, this page will be replaced with an in-depth analysis featuring verified details and photos of every key feature.
Until then, we provide a data‑driven overview that blends statistical analysis of the checkbox selections agents make in MLS with an AI‑powered read of their public remarks—yielding a clearer picture of the building than raw listings alone.
If this building is important to your search, you can help prioritize it for a full audit by requesting one below. To see what a complete report looks like, check out the example full report.
North Shore Club Residences
Building Overview
North Shore Club Residences in Koolauloa (2027) — concrete/steel construction with ocean views, pool, fitness center, concierge.

About North Shore Club Residences
Based on MLS data, North Shore Club Residences is a 2027 building located in the Koolauloa neighborhood. The structure is built with concrete and a steel frame and offers ocean views. Specific unit counts and floor information are not provided in the available records.
According to available records, the building includes on-site amenities such as a pool, fitness center, concierge services, and a security guard. Residences are served by central air conditioning. Short-term rentals and pets are not allowed per the MLS data provided.
Additional details in the MLS indicate covered parking is available. The management company is listed as unknown in the data set. This summary is based on MLS data; prospective buyers should verify current building policies, fees, and management details with the listing agent or condominium association.
Building Features & Data Confidence
All features from MLS data with AI-assisted confidence analysis. Click each category to expand and see details.
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I searched for phrases like '80% owner occupied,' 'majority owner occupied,' and 'highly owner occupied,' but found no such statements. The remarks do not provide an owner-occupancy percentage or even a qualitative indication. This remains unknown based on the public text.
I looked for explicit counts such as '4 elevators,' 'four elevators,' or 'multiple elevators,' but the remarks only mention private elevator access. That confirms elevator service exists, but not how many elevators the building has. Without a stated count, the number remains unknown.
Calculated from the lowest association fee observed across all non-penthouse unit listings for this building.
Calculated from the highest association fee observed across all non-penthouse unit listings for this building.
Calculated from association fees observed in penthouse unit listings for this building.
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This feature is strongly supported by the MLS data: 7/7 current listings list OTCOEX in association_fee_includes. The public remarks do not explicitly mention common-area electricity, but there is no sign of a change or correction, so this appears to be a stable building-level inclusion.
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This feature is strongly supported by the MLS data: 7/7 current listings list SEWER in association_fee_includes. No public remarks contradict it, and there is no indication this is a copy-paste error, so it should be treated as a reliable building-level fee inclusion.
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Concierge service is strongly supported by both the MLS data and the public remarks. One listing explicitly mentions "concierge hospitality services," and the amenity is checked in all 7/7 current listings, indicating consistent building-level offering rather than an isolated unit feature.
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Strong evidence this building has an exercise room or fitness center. All 7/7 MLS listings include the amenity, and multiple remarks independently describe 'fitness facilities' and 'fitness and wellness hales,' which supports a shared building amenity rather than a copy-paste error.
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All 7/7 listings include a walking/jogging path in MLS. The remarks do not name a specific path, but they consistently highlight walkable beachfront access and outdoor experiences, supporting the shared-path interpretation.
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The putting green amenity is supported by unanimous MLS data. Public remarks repeatedly mention championship golf and the David McLay Kidd golf course, making the golf-related amenity set credible even without an explicit 'putting green' phrase.
This is strongly supported across the dataset. All 7/7 listings include recreation area in MLS, and the remarks repeatedly describe resort-style shared spaces such as the wellness pavilion, clubhouse, pools, and outdoor experiences.
MLS data consistently flags a recreation room across all 7/7 listings. The remarks imply broader communal amenity space through references to the clubhouse, wellness pavilion, and resort-style common areas, though they do not name a rec room directly.
Restaurant/dining amenities are strongly evidenced here. Every MLS listing includes the restaurant checkbox, and the remarks directly reference curated dining venues and a beach bar, confirming an on-site food and beverage component.
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Storage is strongly supported across the building. Historical MLS data shows 7/7 listings with storage-related amenities, and the current remarks explicitly mention "private storage" and "additional storage"-type access as part of the residences. This appears to be consistent across listings rather than a one-off agent copy/paste issue.
I looked for surfboard storage or related board storage amenities and found nothing. The remarks mention private storage, but do not identify any dedicated surfboard storage facility.
The tennis court feature is supported by MLS data in all 7/7 listings. While the public remarks do not spell out tennis courts, the consistency across all listings suggests this is a real shared amenity rather than a one-off agent mistake.
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The whirlpool feature is supported by unanimous MLS data and spa-related remarks. Although the wording does not explicitly say 'whirlpool' or 'hot tub,' the repeated spa/wellness references make this a plausible shared amenity.
Evidence is strong and consistent across the listings: 7/7 MLS records show pool-related amenities, and multiple remarks explicitly reference shared "resort pools" as well as a penthouse "private pool." This appears to be a building-level amenity offered in the community, not just a one-off unit feature.
The heated-pool signal comes from MLS amenity coding rather than the public remarks. All 7/7 listings include HEAPOO, while remarks only mention "resort pools" and related wellness amenities, so this is supported by consistent MLS data but not directly by listing text.
I searched for saltwater pool language and found none. The listings mention a private pool and resort pools, but do not specify that the pool is salt water.
In-unit laundry is strongly supported: the MLS currently shows washer/dryer in inclusions for all tracked listings (7/7), and the remarks for Hale 1 Residence #2 explicitly mention a "full laundry room." This appears consistent across listings and not like a copy-paste error.
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I searched for coin laundry, paid laundry, coin-op, quarters, card-operated machines, and similar language, but found nothing. The public remarks do not describe any community laundry payment system.
I looked for phrases such as laundry on each floor, laundry room on every floor, or floor-by-floor laundry, and found none. The remarks only mention a 'full laundry room,' which does not establish community laundry facilities on every level.
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Covered parking is directly mentioned in the remarks for at least one listing: "covered parking." This matches the historical MLS pattern, where all recent listings consistently showed covered/garage-style parking, so the evidence is strong and likely not just a copy-paste anomaly.
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Secured-entry parking appears to be a consistent building feature in the MLS data, with all 7 current listings marked SECENT. The public remarks do not explicitly restate secured access, but there is no contrary evidence, and the repeated MLS pattern suggests this is a stable building amenity rather than a copied mistake.
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I looked for card/fob access security language and did not find any. Concierge service and private entry features are mentioned, but those are not the same as explicit card-access security.
Security guard service appears to be a building amenity based on the current MLS checkbox data, which is unanimous across 7/7 listings. The public remarks do not explicitly mention security personnel, but there is no evidence of a correction or change, so this remains a high-confidence building feature.
I searched for any security patrol language and found none. The listings emphasize privacy, concierge services, and membership amenities, but not patrol-based security.
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Central AC appears to be a building feature based on the MLS, not the remarks: 7/7 current listings include ACCEN/CENAC in unit features and 7/7 include ACCEN in inclusions. The public remarks across the multiple listings focus on design, ocean views, amenities, and laundry, but do not contradict the MLS data. This looks like consistent copy/paste MLS input rather than a disputed feature.
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Concrete construction is strongly supported by the MLS: 7 of 7 current listings check CONCRE, and historical review confidence was already high. The public remarks do not explicitly say “concrete,” but there is no contrary evidence, so this appears to be a consistent building-level trait rather than a copy-paste anomaly.
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Steel frame construction is strongly supported by the MLS: 7 of 7 current listings include STEFRA, with prior confidence already high. The public remarks are silent on framing, so this looks like a stable building-level feature rather than a one-off agent entry.
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I looked for HOA insurance wording such as 'fully insured,' 'comprehensive building insurance,' and 'walls-in coverage,' but none appeared in the remarks. The listing descriptions discuss amenities and finishes, not insurance coverage. So there is no evidence that the building is fully insured.
Fire sprinklers appear to be a building-level feature supported by the MLS record: 7/7 current listings include FIRSPR. The public remarks do not mention sprinkler details, which suggests the MLS amenity is likely being carried consistently rather than copied from remarks, but the repeated current checkbox data is strong evidence.
I searched for phrases like 'fire life safety evaluation passed,' 'FLSE passed,' 'fire safety certified,' and similar wording, but found nothing. There is no public remark evidence that the building passed a fire/life safety evaluation. With no explicit mention, this is treated as not confirmed.
Flood zone determined from official FEMA Digital Flood Insurance Rate Map (DFIRM) data using building coordinates, not from agent-reported listing data.
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Ocean views are clearly a building-level feature. Across the remarks, every listing language centers on oceanfront/Pacific-facing outlooks, with phrases like 'commanding ocean views' and 'uninterrupted Pacific views.' The consistency across multiple agents suggests this is not copy-paste noise but a real shared feature.
There is no evidence in the remarks for mountain views. The descriptions consistently emphasize oceanfront, beachfront, and Pacific views instead. This appears to be a corrected absence rather than a marketed feature.
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Coastline views are implied by the repeated oceanfront/beachfront marketing and the North Shore setting, though the exact wording is not used in the remarks. The MLS field history suggests this is a real view category for the building. Confidence is moderate because the remarks are suggestive rather than explicit.
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Golf is referenced as an amenity, not as a view corridor. No listing language mentions fairway, greens, or golf course outlooks. Buyers may have golf access, but not a golf-course-view building feature based on these remarks.
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There is no support for sunrise views in the public remarks. The marketed outlook is consistently oceanfront/Pacific, with one explicit sunset reference instead. This makes sunrise views unlikely to be a building-level feature.
Sunset views are explicitly confirmed in at least one remark, and the broader oceanfront/Pacific orientation supports it. The phrase 'spectacular Pacific sunsets' is strong evidence that some units offer sunset views. This is consistent across the building's marketing style.
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I looked for explicit references to viewing Friday night fireworks from the residence or lanai and found none. The descriptions focus on oceanfront views and sunsets rather than fireworks visibility.
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Confidence levels are based on MLS checkbox data and AI analysis of listing remarks. High = strong evidence, Medium = some evidence, Low = limited or conflicting evidence. Buyers should always verify critical details independently.