A New Zealander has described the terrifying moments he was caught in his car just a block from where the massacre in Barcelona took place.
Peter Marriott was driving on a road parallel to Las Ramblas when "all hell broke loose".
He said people poured out of the popular tourist precinct in what he described as "sheer chaos".
"It's just gone crazy over here. It's absolute chaos. I didn't expect this here."
Police said 13 people were killed and more than 50 wounded in the terror attack, in which a white van sped down a pedestrian zone and swerved from side to side as it ploughed into tourists and residents.
Marriott was about 700m from the attack. He didn't witness it, but he said it was too close for comfort.
Police quickly swarmed into the area and the air above his home was reverberating as helicopters hovered overhead hunting for those responsible.
He said the ordeal had left him shaken to the core.
"It's pretty rough, to be honest."
Marriott said he was now concerned for friends who had gone into the area at the time of the attack but whom he could not reach.
Otago man Eion Willis was also in the area during the attack and was barricaded in a shop behind grilled bars for hours as pandemonium broke out around him.
Willis, who was holidaying in Barcelona with his wife and friends, was just 100m from the attack when he was suddenly bustled into a shop.
"We were down an alleyway and then all of a sudden a lot of guys came running and they were chased by other guys. We automatically thought they were pick-pockets and they were being chased but in actual fact there was an actual terror [attack] up in the streets and people were running around in pandemonium trying to find different places to hide."
He said the labyrinth of narrow streets around Las Ramblas immediately went into lockdown.
"All the shops just shut down straight away and anyone in the shops had to stay in the shops and down came the cages.
"You couldn't go anywhere."
He said he was caught on the periphery of the carnage just 10m from the street leading to their motel but had a four hour wait to get back to his accommodation.
Willis said he was not with his wife at the time of the attack who was waiting back at their motel.
"We'd left our phones in our rooms. We had to borrow a phone to tell them we were okay four hours later."
The area remained in lockdown with hundreds of police patrolling the streets.
He said the attack had taken an obvious toll on the community with everyone on knife-edge and children crying in fear.
Mike Borren from Palmerston North had been at the exact spot where people were killed an hour before it happened.
"We're lucky we had to catch a bus at a certain time, otherwise they would have stayed a bit longer."
Borren, brother of Bay of Plenty Times' photographer John Borren, said helicopters had been flying overhead since 5.30am (NZT).
"There are just sirens up and down the main boulevard constantly," he said.
Borren said most of the shops in the area had closed and people were only being let into the area randomly.
Two men have been arrested and are being treated "as terrorists", police have confirmed.
The BBC said Spanish media are reporting a suspect involved in the attack has been killed in a shootout with police on the outskirts of the city.
State-owned broadcaster RTVE reported that investigators think two vans were used - one for the attack and a second as a getaway vehicle.
Las Ramblas, a street of stalls and shops that cuts through the center of Barcelona, is one of the city's top tourist destinations.
Additional reporting: AP