You can achieve this by separating the two MX'es in each their own Meraki Network. So you'd have an Organization called, say: Acme Inc, and then you'd have two networks one called e.g. Wyle-E Inc. HQ and the other called Wyle-E Inc Guest.
You'd then connect both MXes to trunk ports on the MS250. Now, one key important aspect, is that Guest services on the Guest MX, must have a VLAN number that is different and unique from the HQ Network. Basically, you'll be separating Guests from corporate users, using L2 segmentation (VLANs). That is, the guest network must not be created on the Corporate MX. If the Corporate Network also contains wireless, which is supposed to be used by the Guest services as well, this is also not a problem. Simply configure the SSID to bridge clients to the Guest VLAN configured on the Guest MX; and make sure this VLAN is trunked throughout the LAN.
By ensuring the Guest network not being created on the Corporate MX, there won't be any L3 traffic routed between the two networks, but the Guest services will still be "piggybacking" off your Corporate LAN infrastructure.
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