PETA criticises fish dishes near Legoland Atlantis by SEA LIFE
PETA urged Legoland Deutschland to stop serving fish dishes because guests first encounter live fish inside Atlantis by SEA LIFE. The park had not yet responded at the time.
More context
Legoland Deutschland drew attention in November 2017 after criticism from animal-rights organisation PETA. The group objected to guests walking through Legoland Atlantis by SEA LIFE, an indoor aquarium attraction holding 535,000 litres of water and more than two thousand fish, and then being able to order fish dishes in a nearby restaurant.
PETA called on the park to serve only vegan food. Its complaint tied the restaurant offer directly to the attraction experience: because Atlantis by SEA LIFE puts living fish at the centre of the visit, the organisation argued that selling fish sent a contradictory message. PETA also said it would prefer to see aquariums removed from theme parks altogether. At the time of publication, Legoland Deutschland had not yet responded.
For the story of Atlantis by SEA LIFE, the incident is more than a catering dispute. It shows how the attraction sits at the crossing point of family entertainment, animal presentation and the wider debate around keeping sea life in visitor attractions. For guests and theme-park fans, it adds a sharper layer of context to an otherwise calm indoor walk-through: the aquarium is part of a Lego resort, but it also carries the sensitivities of a live-animal exhibit.