British Superbike champion Tarran Mackenzie has officially opened a new £200,000 Welcome Centre at the Yamaha Off-Road Experience in the Cambrian Mountains near Llanidloes.

The business, which attracts around 2,000 visitors annually and generates around £600,000 for the local economy, is run by former 10-time British Enduro champion Geraint Jones, his wife Jane and their sons Rowan and Dylan, who are also both former British Enduro champions.

The Welcome Centre, which has a range of quality facilities, including a VIP shower and changing rooms, toilets and kit and drying room, features timber cladding and a porch constructed from larch trees grown on the Jones family’s 300-acre farm.

Built in partnership with Yamaha over the past year, the centre is heated by a woodchip biomass boiler and powered by electricity generated by wind turbines and solar panels.

Harry McKenzie, marketing co-ordinator for Yamaha Motor, said the new Welcome Centre had been built to provide customers with the ultimate experience in off-road riding and training.

The centre exclusively uses Yamaha motorbikes and he added that he was excited to see the new building now open after a lot of hard work by the Jones family.

Geraint explained that his family’s farm was first used for off-road motorcycling in 1965 by a group of local riders. He was allowed to have a go on the bikes and he was soon hooked, going on to ride his first ‘scramble’ in 1967.

He rode his first enduro, the Welsh Two-Day Enduro in Llandrindod Wells, in 1977 where he finished sixth. The following year, he finished fourth and, in 1979, he won the first of his 10 British Enduro Championships.

In 1991, he began riding for Yamaha, a relationship that is still going strong 31 years later. Geraint represented Great Britain 11 times and rode for Wales once.

Launched in 1994, Yamaha Offroad Experience is the longest established motorcycle experience and training centre in the UK. It evolved from the Geraint Jones Enduro School which began in the mid-1980.

Yamaha provides the motorbikes and the Jones family provides the coaches and land to ride on. The NRW also allows the business to use some of its land. The family farm backs onto the 10,000-acre Hafren Forest and Sweet Lamb motorsport complex.

Dylan explained: “We have trained thousands of people over the last 28 years, from complete beginners to international riders. We have a variety of terrain, from farmland and open hill to the vast forests, including the motorsport mecca Hafren Forest.

“This is enduro heaven and has staged British, European and World Enduro Championship events over the past 20 years.”

Rowan explained that the new Welcome Centre was built because the business had outgrown its previous facilities in terms of capacity and customer expectation. The family’s ethos is to support local hospitality businesses.

Cllr Gareth Morgan said: “Mid Wales in general and Llanidloes in particular should be very proud of what the Jones family has achieved with this successful business over the years.

“This business attracts quality visitors who contribute to the local economy throughout the year by supporting hotels, restaurants, guest houses, pubs and B&Bs.”