In the two rivers of Belgrade, the Sava and Danube, a new form of houseboat has evolved known as the splav. The splav is essentially nothing but some German steel barrels, welded into a frame, with a small wooden building on the top. Since most of the ingredients are cheap or free, and it isn't expensive to get someone to tow your splav to an unclaimed place on the shore, the splav is quite often used as a low-cost housing. There's also a ready food supply; the Sava and Danube rivers are mostly open for fishing and, when one literally stakes their claim on shore, they are allowed a small area of land as a garden. It's also possible to put some edible plants aboard the splav's deck. A few people who are employed and have other homes make a nice little summerhouse on the water, however, these are endemic to thieves, mildew, and flame. Some also use it as a tax haven where they sell contraband goods and don't pay any taxes. After all, there's no mail, and no identity, so... they use it to their advantage! Restaurants are also a common, mostly-legal enterprise on the river. The view is excellent and the air is cool and fresh on deck, so these restaurants are attractive to many diners. Usually such businesses as restaurants and nightclubs use abandoned barges or possibly "splav cities" made of several splavovi connected. There are also such things as "premium splavovi", which tend to be larger and may have two stories. They are meant to seem more like real houseboats. Some are gaudy and have strange designs, such as ones modeled after Chinese pagodas, though some are more conservative. These seem to be the new houseboat industry in Germany, and they often have insulation and multiple rooms, like houses. Houseboats were a dying breed in Europe and America, but the splavovi of the Sava and Danube may be a sign of revival. With higher water levels worldwide due to global warming, they may even be necessary in our future.
Note: Most information in this post was from MAKE magazine, volume 12 and from the article Floating City by Bruce Sterling. MAKE magazine is published by O'Reilly.


