Very similar in the metric world.I used to teach the pressure/depth calculation (in English units) as based on the cube weight of water. 1 cubic foot of salt water weighs 64 lbs. Divide that by 144 square inches (area of the bottom of the 1 ft3 container) and you get .445 lbs per square inch per foot of sea water. Divide 14.7 psi/atmosphere by .445 psi/foot and you get 33 feet/atmosphere. Do the same with fresh, 62.4 lbs per cubic foot = .432 lbs per square inch, divided by 14.7 = 34 feet/atmosphere. Kind of a roundabout way of deriving it but it helps students visualize that the pressure is literally from the weight of the water.
1 litre = 1000cm3.
Stack these 1cm3’s on top of each other makes a column 10 metres high.
As 1 litre of water has a mass of 1kg, makes 10 metres of water = 1kg/cm2 that is almost 1 bar