MARJAN DE BLOK readjusts her body weight as she treads along the jetty linking a floating community on a canal off the River IJ. Through the whipping winds, she shouts greetings to many of her neighbours.
On the day I visited in autumn 2021, heavy rains and 50 mile-an-hour winds put Amsterdam, just a short ferry ride away, on alert. But in the northern neighbourhood of Schoonschip, life carried on mostly as usual. De Blok visited with neighbours while the homes glided up and down their steel foundational poles with the movement of the water below.
“It feels like living at the beach, with the water, the saltiness of the air, and the seagulls,” she says. “But it also feels special because, initially, we were told that building your own neighbourhood, it’s just impossible.”
A long list of European lawmakers, urban planners, entrepreneurs, and citizens have visited Schoonschip to see the real-life manifestation of a once science-fiction idea. De Blok, a Dutch reality-TV director, has shown them Schoonschip’s patchwork of environmentally focused social projects: lush floating gardens