Aussie couple’s dream holiday in China turns to disaster after an embarrassing swimming pool mistake at their luxury hotel

An Aussie couple flooded their hotel in China after trying to take a dip in their own indoor swimming pool

A Sydney couple have been left bailing water in their five-star Chinese hotel after they misunderstood the instructions for their ‘mini-pool’ and flooded the building. 

Graham Bernard, 49, and his wife Jodie booked out a suite in the Iseya Panoramic Hotel in Chongqing which offers 360 degree views of the ‘5D’ city. 

Along with the view, one of the other drawcards in the luxury suite was the wet-edge, ‘pool-sized’ bathtub complete with a swim up bar. 

‘We’d seen the hotel on TikTok and thought it looked incredible, so we made sure to get a room with a pool,’ Mr Bernard said. 

After arriving, the Sydney Gym owner and his wife left the room for the day to sightsee and asked hotel staff to fill the ‘bathtub’ for them while they were out. 

‘We came back, got our swimmers on, popped open a bottle of champagne and relaxed. Next minute we’re getting texts about water and flooding,’ Mr Bernard said.

The hotel asked the couple if there ‘was any bathtub water in (their) room’. 

‘Could you please turn off the water in the bathtub? There will be a water leakage downstairs after it is full,’ a text read. 

An Aussie couple flooded their hotel in China after trying to take a dip in their own indoor swimming pool

The couple (pictured) had booked a premium suite in the panoramic hotel which featured a wet-edged pool

The couple (pictured) had booked a premium suite in the panoramic hotel which featured a wet-edged pool

The couple booked out a suite in the Iseya Panoramic Hotel in Chongqing (pictured)

The couple booked out a suite in the Iseya Panoramic Hotel in Chongqing (pictured)

‘We didn’t think we’d need to turn the water off in a wet-edge pool – we weren’t doing dive bombs or doing (anything) deliberately,’ Mr Bernard explained. 

‘Dramatically, the doorbell rang, and all of a sudden it felt like a CSI TV scene.’

A manager and three cleaners arrived and pointed out a sign in Chinese asking guests to turn the taps off if the pool was full. 

Staff informed the guests the flooding was seeping down to lower floors.  

Footage shared to social media showed the Australians labouring away with the staff to bail buckets of water from the room.  

‘We might have flooded downstairs with our big pool because we filled it up too much,’ Mr Bernard said.  

The clip racked up more than 18million views, and left commenters divided. 

‘Why would you think this is funny? I hope they charged you,’ one wrote. 

Graham and Jodie Bernard (above, bailing water) flooded their Chongqing hotel room after misunderstanding instructions for the oversized bathtub

Graham and Jodie Bernard (above, bailing water) flooded their Chongqing hotel room after misunderstanding instructions for the oversized bathtub

Footage showed the Australians helping cleaners remove water with pots (pictured)

Footage showed the Australians helping cleaners remove water with pots (pictured)

Hotel staff said flooding had reached lower floors of the skyscraper hotel (above, a message sent to Mr Bernard)

Hotel staff said flooding had reached lower floors of the skyscraper hotel (above, a message sent to Mr Bernard)

‘Okay this isn’t funny. Usually I’m all for antics but this is just inconveniencing so many people,’ another said.

‘So you guys started splashing around and making everyone else’s lives hell,’ a third accused. 

But others saw the humour in the situation. 

‘This hotel room looks incredible! (Minus the faulty overflow drain, obviously),’ one joked. 

‘That seems like a design flaw, there’s no way you could have known,’ a second wrote. 

Hotel staff later informed Mr Bernard the leakage was not the couple’s fault. 

The issue was caused by a drain blockage, and the hotel apologised for the inconvenience. 

‘They were great with us and apologised every time we saw them. And yes – we did use the bath again,’ Mr Bernard said. 

Chongqing is known as China’s ‘5D city’, where overlapping highways, bridges and rail lines run above and below each other, creating a layered transport system unique to the region.

It is often described as a ‘vertical city’ because its mountainous terrain foundation means buildings are constructed on steep slopes and different floors can serve as ground level.

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