Key Points
- An aquarium in a Berlin leisure complex has burst.
- The AquaDom is one of the largest aquariums in the world and was home to about 1500 exotic fish.
- Two people were injured by splinters of glass.
A huge aquarium in Berlin that was home to about 1500 exotic fish has burst, spilling one million litres of water and debris onto a major road in the busy Mitte district, emergency services say.
About 100 emergency responders rushed to the site, a leisure complex that houses a Radisson hotel and a museum as well as what Sea Life Berlin said was the world's largest freestanding cylindrical aquarium at 14 metres in height.
"It felt like an earthquake," Naz Masraff, who had been staying at the hotel, said.
Another hotel guest, Sandra Weeser, spoke of chaos.
"The whole aquarium burst and what's left is total devastation. Lots of dead fish, debris," she told Reuters.

The AquaDom has the biggest cylindrical tank in the world. Source: AP / Joerg Carstensen
Buses were sent to provide shelter for the hotel guests, police said, as outside temperatures in Berlin in the morning hovered at about minus 7C.
Radisson told its Radisson Rewards loyalty club members in an email that the Radisson Collection Hotel Berlin was closed until further notice.
Search and rescue dogs scoured the ground floor of the building, which was too littered with debris for responders to access, but found no casualties, the Berlin fire brigade said on Twitter.
A spokesperson for the fire brigade told Reuters it was still unclear what had caused the AquaDom aquarium to burst.

Debris from the incident spilled out of the entrance to Sea Life at the Radisson Hotel. Source: DPA / Picture Alliance
The company, which had offered glass elevator rides through the AquaDom aquarium, said it would also remain closed until further notice.
Neither the fire brigade nor the police commented on the fate of the fish although police said on Twitter there had been "unbelievable maritime damage".
Emergency services shut a major road next to the complex that leads from Alexanderplatz toward the Brandenburg Gate due to the large volume of water that had flooded out of the building.
The aquarium was last refurbished in 2020, according to the website of the DomAquaree complex.