85-year old Giancarlo Morbidelli’s life story is a rags-to-riches saga worthy of Hollywood. One of the several self-made men from humble backgrounds who in the 1960s-70s powered Italy’s postWW2 resurgence from derelict battleground to thriving economy, Morbidelli was born in 1934 into a poor family living off the soil in the Marche region of Italy. He began work at 16 as an apprentice fitter in a factory repairing woodworking machinery for the furniture industry, one of the two engineering specialties of what became his home town of Pesaro, on the Adriatic Coast south of Rimini. The other? Motorcycles – it’s the home of Benelli.
This helps explain Giancarlo Morbidelli’s passion for motorcycle sport which he pursued from a very young age, even after starting his own machine tool company in the late '50s with working capital of just 30,000 lire (then about $40/£15).
As a relief from the punishing days spent building Morbidelli Woodworking Machines into the global industry leader it had become by the 1980s, he used his technical skills after-hours to tune locally-built Benelli and MotoBi bikes with some success.
In 1997, Morbidelli sold the machine firm to a rival company who moved production to a new purpose-built facility outside the city of Pesaro. This left Giancarlo himself with the previous inner-city factory site, which he then converted into a motorcycle museum that opened to the public in 1999, displaying over 350 bikes dating from 1904, including a complete array of Morbidelli GP racers.
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